After a week of touring schools with my daughter and seeing the impact technology is having on education, I couldn't help but be impressed. With iPads, Kindles and the Internet, students of every age are now tackling the most boring of subjects with passion and energy.
It left me exhausted.
I sometimes yearn for slower times and often remember myself as a young, glamorous woman living in Manhattan in the 1970s. Believe it or not, my favorite Saturday night past time was going down to the Barnes and Noble annex on Eighth Street, where I poured over endless books.
I wished all it took to absorb the literature was to lay my hands upon the hard cover. Closing my eyes, I would thrill with the adventures pouring through my veins, the photographs of masters shocking my brain with their clarity of subject matter, explosions of color.
Thank goodness we have not evolved that far, but even in that daydream, there is still the bookstore. Now all of the magic happens on a flat computer screen at our nearest coffeee shop or at home on the couch.
Needing to reboot my soul, I took a trip to my local dark, overcrowded, used book shop. Pushing open the door, a little bell attached to the door rang as I entered. Dust danced lazily in the streaming light from the windows, a testament to the stillness within.
There was only a scant three foot wide aisle to enter into, but 'Oh! The treasures to behold!'
I winded my way to the back of the store, passing piles upon piles, shelves upon shelves, of used books from every era.
The first book I picked up was from the turn of the twentieth century, “Junior Songs” by Hollis Dann, professor of music at Cornell University. The book was filled with the laments of homesick immigrants. There was the Polish National Song, Bedouin Love Song, Song of the Immigrant, Our Native Land, Chief of the Arab Band, The Marseillaise, America the Beautiful. This was no mere music book. This was a history book that told of the time when almost everyone here came from somewhere else, and missed home.
Turning the ragged brown-edged pages, my eyes fixed upon a song called, “You'll Soon Forget Kathleen,” by W. Langston Williams. Here are the verses, and see if your heart doesn't ache with the experiences of your ancestors.
“Oh, Leave not Kathleen, There'll be no one to cherish her, alone in the wide world, unpitied she'll sigh. And scenes that were loveliest when thou were but near her, recall the sad visions of days long gone by.
Oh, leave not the land of your childhood where, joyous pass'd the first days of your youth, where gaily we wandered 'mid valley and wildwood, Oh! Those were the bright days of innocent truth.
Tis vain that you say that you'll never forget me, To the land of the Shamrock you'll ne'er turn more. Far away from your sight, you will cease to regret me. You'll soon forget Kathleen and Erin Go Bragh.”
I felt a tug o' my heartstrings as I remembered my grandmother's wish to return one more time to her Ireland, but she never did.
I perused a few other music books from that era and found the same nostalgia for times gone by; lands left, and new lands found.
As I rounded a turn through the catacomb of books, I was hit by American culture from every decade. The old books were like the DNA of our country, holding the recorded memories of every thought, every fad, every religion, science and passing fancy.
One shelf held both Willa Cather's pioneer stories and Jackie Collin's celebration of wealth, stardom and decadence. In just short of 100 years, it is astonishing to see where have we come from, and where we did go.
And now? What books herald our future, because even in a used bookstore, the future exists.
I found it right next to the books of Cather's frontier; novels by Paulo Coelho, author of The Alchemist and the Pilgrimage. Is that the current journey of America? With lands conquered, will the country now look inward, into the frontier of consciousness and spiritual awareness?
The self indulgences of Collin's 1980s are gone with our deflated economy. Now the country celebrates giving back and the power of the group rather than only individualism. The path is unrolling before us and we walk without even realizing it. The books are our maps.
Squeezing through the narrow aisles, I come face to face with How to Make Money, Thinking Positive, Mid Life Crisis, How to be Younger, romance, science fiction, and then, Charles Dickens.
I stop and am hit by the sacredness of the books. Dickens is an almost scriptural account of our culture. Whether we like it or not, it is the stuff we are made of, it is the revelation of our weaknesses and our strengths. We learned about evil from Dickens, and innocence, pure beauty and good.
Almost overwhelmed with the power of the close space, I began to make my way out, when the shopkeeper said, “You can't leave without seeing these.”
Climbing a chair, he reached up to a tall shelf and brought down a stack of dime store novels and pulp fiction, all now priced at close to $100.
With colorful covers of strange creatures and barely dressed damsels in distress, yet another era has been revealed; alive, real in my hands today as it was in someone else's hands 60 years ago.
And therein lies the sadness with which I greet our current path. The world is spinning faster and faster, and I wonder, when this generation gets older, what will they cherish about their past? Could it be that old 1990's Macintosh I keep in my office? I should hold onto it. It may be worth a lot of money someday.
http://www.seraphemera.org
It may be true that, at Town Hall you can search and view records electronically, but you'll notice the Town Clerk maintains a records vault full of books (with real paper in them). There's a reason for that.
You make a good point about libraries. More and more communities when faced between teaching kids and libraries opt for virtual on line libraries for two reasons - the cost of todays libraries to run and the fact that the under 18 generation prefers borrowing a book on their nook. A generational change indeed and accelerating. We have to focus on what's best for kids!
But few long for the days of horse plowing, cleaning out the stalls, milking your cows at 5:00 am, hand laundry, fireside radio, churning your own butter etc. Progress and change, the forces of the universe itself, compel all forward.
The state librarian is working on that, and the legislature is providing grants to convert them voluntarily - for now - for each town.
Why? Well, have you ever gone looking for a document you knew you wrote, only to find it... on a FLOPPY?
Town halls keep a single record.
See: http://www.cslib.org/publicrecords/GL_2006-1April2006.pdf On page two: Land records and indices must be duplicated on microfilm. Admin. Reg. 11-8-21(i) requires the microfilming of maps and also refers to the microfilming of deeds, stating, “Security film of maps placed on file in the office of the town clerk shall be required and stored in a manner similar to security film of deeds.” There must be a systematic program for microfilming all land records, in accordance with General Letter 96-2, “Required Minimum Microfilming Standards for Public Records,” and microfilm security copies must be stored at an approved offsite location.
Anybody want to buy vinyl records? Yes. A few people. Very few. Where is Tower records and Virgin Records? Gone. Books on paper will become a smaller niche every year until some time 20 or 30 years from now when selling books will not be profitable enough to pay rent on a storefront anywhere. Then, you can buy your used books on the internet just like you can now buy used film cameras and rolls of film to put in them.
They keep a backup on microfiche (a technology) but there is only one original record.
And even the PAPER records are, in fact, duplicates, not originals, strictly speaking. They're photocopied onto the (numbered) pages of the record books. For homework: spend some time in youjr local Town Clerk's office and watch what they do. Feel free to ask questions - municipal clerks tend to be very helpful and desirous of wanting the public to understand their function.
Public schools are in the process of dumping textbooks (see Brookfield 2011 - 9th grade) for IPads. Ain't America great or what?
http://simplesensibilities.com/2011/05/18/should-children-use-an-e-reader/
As far as "chopping down trees," I believe since the last unseasonable snowstorm, we need to chop down a few more trees here in Connecticut. What is a virtue in one era when pushed to an extreme is a vice in another. Vinyl Records ... believe it or not ... I purchased 5 yesterday at Cutler's Records that now prominently displays them. There are Vinyl Record shops around the State that are experiencing a new lease on life because of a resurgent interest. There is now "Record Store Day" where special limited release Vinyl Records are put out. http://www.recordstoreday.com/Home . This resurgence of interest in Vinyl is fueled by, get this, people in their early to mids 20s. Are Vinyl records better ... I think modern analog recording beats digital recording as it creates a more full sound ... but even if the sound of Vinyl is not better ... the "old" technology is now hip. Are bookstores disapperaring. A blind man can see that. The real questions is ... do we as a society want the "book" to disappear ? I say we do not.
I thought I would never agree with you about anything, but you have this one 100% right. Chopping trees down and trucking them all over the planet with ink on them to disseminate information is over. Book stores are like record stores, a thing of the past.