Many years ago, I read about an entire classification of people who do not see the bright light at the end of the tunnel. Instead their near death experiences are conducted in a vast and seemingly endless library: row upon row, shelf upon shelf of books. Well, if I have any choice in the matter, you can be certain I am raising my hand to exit under that "sortie" sign: heaven or hell, come what may.
The relaxing quietude found in browsing through library stacks holds a unique and subtle quality, as calmness is simultaneously joined by an expectant stimulation and time seems to slip into itself as you wander through the limitless reading possibilities, gathering and discarding. It sure beats tunnels and bright lights...
But living in a cabin in the middle-of-nowhere Vermont with a one year old Little Miss, places distinct limits on browsing around. Of course, it isn't that Vermont is without libraries. Montpelier's Kellogg-Hubbard library, a rough hewn granite building with oval windows tucked beneath its eaves is a beacon of warmth and light on a cold winter's evening and I've come to enjoy the small-town atmosphere where the librarian knows my name and I don't even have to show my card to check out books. But the library is small with a limited selection of popular titles and browsing the shelves is necessarily curtailed and frankly not terribly enjoyable.
So I've taken up the next best thing: inter-library loan. Inter-library loan is not particularly new to me. In fact, my sister and I once crossed interlibrary wires when we both wanted to read the same relatively obscure book so we could talk about it together as we were reading. I was living in Baltimore and she in Iowa and when she received her copy she realized that her library had requested the copy from the Baltimore Enoch Pratt Library, essentially "stealing" my copy from beneath my nose.
Nevertheless, I've never been too keen on waiting for a book but in a few days time I should receive my limit of three books requested from The University of Vermont's Baily Howe Library. I may have to wait and may only be able to browse the online card cataglogue, but I couldn't have more anticipation for some "real" books. Books that I am actually interested in reading. It has been a long time.