Why I Am in Love with Librarians
by Julia Alvarez -- Library Journal, 01/15/2003
I love how they know things
only to pass them on,
how they fade into
the faux-wood-paneled
walls of the reference room,
their
faces hidden between the covers of books,
how they look up only to help you:
What is the capital of Afghanistan?
How do the Maori bury their dead?
Who invented Barbie? How many were murdered in Guatemala in '84?
—every query worthy of their attention,
any questioner taken
seriously,
curiosity the only requirement.
I love how they listen, their
lined faces opening,
their eyes already elsewhere:
scanning a plain for
the lights of a distant city,
hunting for bodies in the
highlands,
searching the web for Barbie—
their minds like those flocks of
little birds in winter
swooping over a landscape, looking, looking.
And
always when they get back to you,
that sweet smile on their faces,
pride
and deep affection for what can be known,
as if Barbie's invention
or
the tally of the massacred
could save you, could save the world!
And who knows
if Stalin or Hitler
had spent their youth in the library,
history might be
rewritten,
re-catalogued by librarians?
Curiosity sends us out
to a
world both larger and smaller
than what we know and believe in
with a
passion for finding an answer
or at least understanding our questions.
That road is paved with librarians,
bushwhackers, scouts with
string
through the labyrinths of information,
helpers who disappear the
moment
you reach your destination.
for Joy Pile
| Author Information |
| Julia Alvarez, currently writer-in-residence at Middlebury College, VT, is the author of novels (In the Time of the Butterflies), books for young readers, and books of poetry, including the forthcoming collection Keeping Watch . Joy Pile is the Foreign Language Reference and Acquisitions Librarian, Starr Library, Middlebury College |







