Question:

Oct. 6th, 2009 03:28 pm
[personal profile] mariness
When did it become acceptable to talk - and to talk loudly - in libraries?

Admittedly, the little Winter Garden library here is not much of a library in the classic sense, focusing as it does on public computers, DVDs and CDs. (Since, alas, my current budget does not allow for the purchasing of any DVDs, and all of you are yelling at me to catch up on Supernatural, I rather approve of this focus.) It also hosts several classes (most in a separate computer room, some in the public computer area) and various Fun Library Things, including Storytime for little kids and Rock Band for older kids. (I'm not entirely sure of the wisdom of trading in books for a Wii at an older age but the library assures us that Rock Band is hands down one of their most popular programs.) Which is to say, often the library itself is hosting Noisy Things. And this is not a library filled with Comfy Chairs (although it has a few, generally filled with people making use of the free WiFi) since its bookshelves and DVD racks are already out of space and chairs are being pulled away for more shelves and tables to hold books and other things. (I say "already" since the building was just built 2 years ago so .I would have thought they would have planned accordingly.)

But I still don't get why it's now apparently completely ok for people to hold loud conversations, sometimes by cell phone, sometimes not, in the library. In some cases, people are actually holding supposedly semi-private business conversations in the library - I overheard - more specifically, I couldn't help overhearing - a guy talking at some volume about the upcoming bankruptcy proceedings for a client's business, with names mentioned. And the thing is, none of this is getting a single glance from library patrons, let alone the "shushes" I remember from my my library visits when I was a little reader or back when I worked at a library happily stuffing books into shelves, allowing the library to be filled with more noise than your typical Barnes and Noble.

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