Fiction section, grpl.org 2/2019 (click image for full-size image view) |
Give thanks with a great INSPIRATIONAL read
Find a ROMANCE you'll love
Unearth great MYSTERY books
New game, new voices, URBAN FICTION, real expressions
Boldly discover new worlds - SCIENCE FICTION, FANTASY & HORROR
With the advent of cable and satellite TV in the 1980s and then the home use of Internet in the 2000s, the hours available each day for a person to seek answers, information, entertainment or diversion have not grown, but the choices and perception of interacting with the materials has expanded. As a result, the volume of books loaned to residents has not increased with growing population size; in many cases even as titles published electronically and in print have increased, sales and library lending has declined. One commenter suggested that maybe 5 or 10 % of the US population reads for pleasure (not work-related or assigned in courses of study), but that those people have slightly increased the amount of reading that they do as choices of format has expanded to included audio download (while commuting, dog-walking, or dish washing, for instance) and e-books to carry on cellphone or dedicated e-reading device to fill the time spent waiting in line, or in-between tasks when there are 5 or 10 minutes available.
Public libraries serve many functions in the age of Internet and mobile computing and communicating. The act as places of warmth to those without a home, and places of cooling during hot summer days to these same people. Job seekers and people lacking Internet at home or work can use the public terminals for set daily time limits when they login. Library staff organize a range of events and programs each month to suit all the populations - children, retired, care-givers, parents and working-age people, teens, and so on. A large collection of music CD and feature film (and non-fiction) DVD is available for loan to residents or to people far-away who make a request though the state-wide interlibrary loan system.
In the time of the Information Economy and Knowledge Workers, it is especially important to be able to speak with a trained reference librarian to solve a problem, seek an answer, or make a strategy to gather needed information and make decisions. Like the rest of the society and economy, the public library and its branches continue to look for ways to be of most service to those it serves.
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