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Layne's avatar

I smiled at the anecdote of looking at the library card to see who else has borrowed a book and, additionally, when it was last borrowed. I do the same thing. As a reader and a teacher I have begun in the past few years to give books from my 'personal library' to others without expecting the books to return. Often the books are returned, but even saying a 'personal' library is starting to feel off.

I am tempted, at times, to only borrow from the library and sidestep asking a friend or colleague if I can borrow something I know they have in their 'personal library'. That is, I am tempted to sidestep interaction and replace it with transaction. Just this morning I have had no luck finding a book in the university's catalogue. While the library's resources enable me to search the state for a copy of the book at any public or university library, and we are encouraged to do so by library staff, I suspect that my colleague down the hall has a copy in their office or at their home. I will go ask them, but why is this not my first impulse?

Here is where I sense we can begin subverting the book-hunting-consumer instinct: When purchasing a book I see now there is always the possibility that it will be given it away, and probably should be given away. In the end, I may not be buying it for myself at all.

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Jessica Carney's avatar

I am reminded of how struck I was the first time I read The Elves and the Shoemaker (by the Brothers Grimm, available in a beautifully illustrated version by Jim LaMarche) by the fact that when buyers come into the shop and find the elfen-made shoes that are perfectly suited to them, they are so delighted that they offer to pay double the shoes' price. It was that attitude, not the existence of magical creatures, that most felt like an imaginary fairy tale to me. But what a beautiful lived expression of honesty and generosity to say, "These are worth more to me than you are asking, and I would like to pay their actual value." Not always possible or even advisable, but sometimes it could be! Instead of thinking our job as buyers is to maximize the "deal" we can get, could we begin considering whether the prices we pay are an honest reflection of the value we are receiving and the time and craftsmanship put into them by the seller? And if things seem out of whack, to consider correcting the imbalance by simply offering to pay more when we can?

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