I went down to the central Camden County Library in Voorhees today to pay off a book fine I've been avoiding (I can never seem to get them in on time!), and went up to the history section. While browsing, I realized that although I've coming to the library since before I can remember, I've never walked around the place (I tend to get stuck in the history section and never leave). There was almost no one there (it was a half hour 'til closing), so I took a walk around. I went into the reference center and was flipping through some Pinelands Commission reports they have. I put them back, looked around the corner, and what to my wondering eyes should appear, but a jolly old elf and ... wait, that's not right. Actually, they have an entire room dedicated to New Jersey! The regular part of the library has a million books on the shelves about New Jersey (alright, maybe around fifty), the usual Beck and Pierce books, as well as "Down the Long-A-Coming", "Down Jersey", etc. I never thought they'd have reference copies stashed away in a far corner of the library.
Anyway, the New Jersey room has to have two hundred books there, it's unbelievable. They are not at all organized, and the library was closing, but I glanced for a few minutes and found a copy of "Early Furnaces and Forges" by Charles Boyer. I'll have to go back after school ends after next week and see what else they have there...
So yea, the lesson for the day is don't talk to anyone or walk around too much and you too can find large suprises in a library you've been going to for twenty years.
Anyway, the New Jersey room has to have two hundred books there, it's unbelievable. They are not at all organized, and the library was closing, but I glanced for a few minutes and found a copy of "Early Furnaces and Forges" by Charles Boyer. I'll have to go back after school ends after next week and see what else they have there...
So yea, the lesson for the day is don't talk to anyone or walk around too much and you too can find large suprises in a library you've been going to for twenty years.
