While we would never recommend that you stop buying books, the economic downturn will surely cause some readers to think twice before shelling out $25 or more every time they want to pick up a new hardcover. Especially when you can get them for free at the literary gold mine known as the New York Public Library. With more than 52 million items (books, DVDs, CDs) available in Manhattan (41 branches), the Bronx (35) and Staten Island (12), the NYPL makes your local bookstore look like a veritable grain of sand on the beach. They have great author events (NYPL Live, soon to welcome Joan Didion), nerdy exhibitions (a new one is devoted to the artists colony Yaddo), places to sit, computers and, for laptop luggers, powerful Wi-Fi. Any city resident can sign up for a card at nypl.org. According to David Ferriero, the Andrew W. Mellon director of the NYPL, more people are starting to use the library; here are some reasons why.
They anticipate your needs. According to Ferriero, there is a staff of librarians that study and anticipate best-seller lists to help determine how many copies of each book they need to purchase. “When the last Harry Potter book came out, we bought 2,000 copies, and there were already 1,600 requests on the day before it hit the shelves.” But best-sellers are a mere sliver of the volumes the library acquires. “We try to cater to all New York readers’ interests,” Ferriero says. That means science books, sci-fi, romance, manga, history, so-called street lit and books in translation—crucial in a multilingual city where foreign-language stores have a hard time staying in business.
The NYPL carries a lot of books that you won’t find at your local bookstore. Sometimes there’s a waiting list for bestsellers at the NYPL (note: if you want the new Stephanie Meyer novel now, go buy it). But when it comes to selection, the library is unbeatable. Here’s a random sampling of books that you can check out at the central branch but aren’t currently at the well-stocked Penn Station Borders: Balzac’s Lost Illusions, Denis Johnson’s Jesus’ Son, Joy Williams’s Honored Guest, Richard Price’s Freedomland, Jonathan Lethem’s Motherless Brooklyn and Patricia Smith’s Blood Dazzler (just nominated for a National Book Award).
In fact, you can find almost any book at the NYPL. The library has four research branches: Humanities and Social Sciences off of Bryant Park; Science, Industry and Business at Madison Avenue and 34th Street; the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture at Malcolm X Boulevard (Lenox Avenue) and 135th Street; and the Library for Performing Arts at Lincoln Center. (All are noncirculating libraries, which means that you can’t take the books home.) “We don’t throw anything out at these branches,” says Ferriero. “The purpose of the research libraries is to collect material that is going to be used forever.”
You can reserve books online. Members can track and request books at nypl.org. If you’re interested in a book but aren’t ready to pick it up just yet, you can add it to your online “to-read” queue—just like Netflix! You can also renew your books without going to the library. And when you’re done, you can drop them off at any branch, regardless of where you checked them out.
They will do research for you. Sometimes, there are questions that even Google can’t answer. But you can still call 917-ASK-NYPL, which will put you in touch with researchers seven days a week, 24 hours a day. Topics of inquiry have included the history of Gorgonzola cheese and the origins of the word camp (in the sense of Susan Sontag’s “Notes on Camp”). “Someone recently asked: In what sport, aside from cards, does one ‘deal’?” says one researcher. “The only game we found was hurling—a celtic sport. It’s also sometimes used in baseball to describe pitching.”
It has history. Ever wondered why Brooklyn and Queens have separate library systems? It’s because the NYPL was founded in 1895 (starting out with the consolidation of the private libraries of John Jacob Astor and James Lennox), three years before Queens and Brooklyn joined the city of New York. Though some branches aren’t much to look at, others ooze with historical detail and personal stories. When the Tompkins Square library celebrated its centennial in 2004, Martin Scorsese showed up with a book he borrowed there frequently as a child: Deems Taylor’s A Pictorial History of the Movies.
They are bringing in kids. The NYPL continually looks for ways to welcome the young, offering story readings and a range of YA fiction. Hardly stuck in the Dark Ages, the library recently started offering video games. “The teens feel a sense of ownership of their spaces and what happens in them,” says Ferriero.
They can help you find a job, start a business or change your career. The Science, Industry and Business branch, in particular, offers career counseling, seminars and databases that can help you find new jobs and business leads.
It’s doesn’t cost anything. Unless, that is, you return your items late, in which case you’ll be charged, per day, 25 cents for books and CDs, and one dollar for DVDs and CD-ROMs.
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Just like every other employer in the country, the NYPL is laying off workers, hiring less people, and cutting back the salary and qualifications for new hires. I'm sure all of this helps them save money and maintain the same level of service during the Recession. Service is important, because with everybody out of work we need a place to go during the day where we can feel and act productive.
sure, the NYPL orders plenty of copies of new books, but new books don't hit the shelves until two to three months after they are released. and if you work a 9-5 job, good luck getting to your library to pick it up in the 4 hours a week the nearest branch is open after 6P. The NYPL apparently exists to give the homeless, the elderly and the kids a place to go during the day, because they certainly don't cater to anyone who works business hours.
I should go the library more often--my apartment is overrun with stacks of books on my desk and the floor and the sofa, but most of the time the NYPL doesn't have new books, and I'll be out of touch if I wait two or three months. I have to have new books immediately, when I'm excited about them. So I go to The Strand, a few days a week, and the 25-50% discount makes it hard not to buy. And when I meet the authors at a reading, well, I have to buy their books too.
Stop by the Brooklyn Public Library... or better yet go to their website and sign up for a free library card online. http://www.brooklynpubliclibrary.org It is sooo easy!
I stopped by my local llibrary where I saw the book that I'd just finished, paid $15 for and put back on a shelf . Hey.I could have spent that $15 elsewhere. I used to work next store to the libray and now its a bit inconvenient to get there but being an avid reader in tougher times, its seems it really is worth the trip.