Free Books: Going Fast
Today, our public library returns to virtual and curbside pickup only. Since summer we’ve been able to enter our branch (fully masked and separated, of course), to browse the stacks and check out the new fiction and nonfiction sections. We could find our next great read. And often (at least in my case) serendipity was involved. I didn’t go hunting for The Mirror and the Light by Hilary Mantel. But there it was, languishing in the new fiction section.
So much do I count on these library visits, that when I heard the news of the closure late Friday, I added another to-do for Saturday: get over to the Chantilly branch and get some books. Apparently, many folks had the same idea. By late morning the parking lot was filling up and people were dashing from building to car, bundles of books under their arms.
A woman with a clicker monitored our arrival, to keep capacity to Covid rules. She reminded me I could only stay for 30 minutes. That was fine; I only had 10.
But I made a beeline for the new section, and got right to browsing. There was Patti Smith’s Year of the Monkey, a memoir that’s been on my list for months. I grabbed John Bolton’s The Room Where It Happened, too. It seems a little passé by now, but I’ll give it a try.
Into my arms went books on artificial intelligence and mindfulness and the works of Walt Whitman. If a topic seemed down my alley at all, it made the cut.
When I left the library there were five souls waiting to get in. Free books — there’s nothing like ’em.