Tuesday, April 11, 2006

Librarians and Their Wonderfully Subversive Plays

Long, long ago I worked at the local library as a page.

I wandered through the aisles of books with my heavy wooden cart, shelving and organizing and reading. Oh yes, reading!

I certainly did a fair bit of that over the course of my shift. It was almost impossible not to flip through intriguing books and do a little skim-reading before replacing them on the shelves.

(Mind you, I most certainly shelved more books in my allotted hours than my dear brother--he'd actually go so far as to retire to the children's section and get comfortable on a bean-bag chair with a book. He was amazingly adept at appearing busy before a senior librarian appeared around the corner. My brother pointed out that usually this librarian was our mother, so he was not too likely to get canned, although I do believe he was pushing his luck even so.)

The many, many books that caught my attention went on my Stack-'o-Books-to-Take-Home. There were not many job perks to being a library page perhaps, but one of the immunities in the three golden years that I worked there (for under five bucks an hour) was the freedom from library fines.

Oh, the joy of taking home eleventy-million library books and reading them at leisure. Sigh, those were the days.

Alas, all good things come to an end. Library Page was a job available only to high-school students, and so eventually I had to seek my further fortunes in less-missed positions such as Video-store Clerk and Gas-station Girl.

I've always remembered my time at the library fondly. And after all, I am a librarian's daughter.

My mom retired last week from the Library after twenty-five years. But of course, there was a party! And hurrah, I was invited!

Two dozen librarians descended for food and merriment at Diane's house. I've met most of them over the years, and they still give me privileges such as going behind the Desk to the back room to get my pick of special books for my Preschool storytimes. I feel loved. :)

My mom was treated to birthday cake (her 65th), guitar sing-a-longs, gift certificates, speeches, and new luggage for her trip to Italy, but I think the highlight of the evening was a wonderfully subversive (well, for librarians) puppet-play. It poked a little bit of fun at all my mother's favourite types of annoying patrons (that's library-speak for customers) as well as a few pointed jabs at the High Mucky-Mucks of Red-Tape down at Library Headquarters. They are so, er, *cough cough* beloved to my mom's heart. The sweetest little librarian puppet represented my mom. And it all unfolded under a large sign that reads Shh!

I thought the play was hilarious! There was one wizard puppet whose broad Glaswegian accent left little doubt that it portrayed some particular someone in middle management who has gone over to The Dark Side .

"Och, woman!", the puppet screeched in answer to the librarian puppet's question at one point in the script. "How should I know?! Just click your heels together three times and say: 'There's no place like the staff room! There's no place like the staff room!' "

Heh, I laughed so hard. Hmmmm. Perhaps you had to be there....Anyway, trust me, it was all true to life.

Oh, and I'm including this picture of my mother's hair for my brother's benefit. She cut eight inches off it in honour of her retirement and it looks fabulous. Very healthy and thick-looking and I hope my own hair is as dark at her age. Drat it, I have a couple silver hairs already. Perhaps the secret is becoming a librarian.

16 comments:

Crazy Me said...

Working surrounded by books sounds heavenly ... sigh.

Anonymous said...

Mmmm....Library

Grant said...

I wanted to become a librarian, but I looked at their job requirements and they said I had to have a master's degree in library science. Master's degree? Library science? I've never seen that listed in the course catalogs of any University I considered. I didn't even know such a thing existed when I got my silly IT degree.

Jade L Blackwater said...

Great post - that puppet show looks funny just from the pictures you shared. Congrats to your mum!

BostonPobble said...

Love the post. Love the library. Love the librarians. Love the books. I'm so envious you get to go behind the counter. I've always wanted to do that...

Fizzy said...

What a wonderful celebration for your Mum's leaving party. A brilliant idea.
I wish I had hair like that, I hav far too many grey hairs for someone in thier 30's (all be it late 30's)
Thanks for your comment :)

Amy said...

What a splendid post - this is my first visit to your blog and I'm glad to have found my way here (via a stone, a leaf, an unfound door by the way)


amy

adman said...

How come me mum has a full head of dark hair and I don't...I worked in the library but it didn't wear off. Sneaking off to read books is a work perk I seldom get to enjoy anymore.

Katya Coldheart said...

thanks for stopping by, i'm glad you liked my dresses, its so hard to find things that look good, i'm glad you found some skirts, my hips are so wide i'm not good with separates...lol

love your hair bobble too...and if i worked in a library i would never get any work done, i'm such a bookworm...

:0)

K. said...

Congratulations and best wishes to your mom! I think I would have rather liked being a Library Page myself in my high school days. So many books, so little time....

Michelle said...

I'd give up law to work in a library or own my own bookshop! Lucky You ;)

Tai said...

I have more grey hair than your dear mamma...I suspect it's because I'm NOT a librarian.

:(

I wish I was though. However, I always suspected that I would be fired instantly...they would be forever discovering me in a dark corner in a book (kinda like Adman....)

Crystal said...

Retirement...that will be sounding kinda quaint once my generation hits the golden years. The party seemed fabulous and I bet that was one hilarious puppet-show!

Pol* said...

I was always envious of that job!

Josh said...

I was a library aid in elementary school and then worked at one in college. I loved it. It was always so quiet and calm. Seemed like timed slow down just so you could read.

ps I haven't seen any of those alleged hairs ;)

Zambo said...

Hey Spider Girl.

I hope your mom has a great time in Italy!

Sounds like a great send off!

Take care out there!

Your Pal,

Zambo.