What an unpleasant book. Scott Douglas doesn't seem to have an unreservedly positive thing to say about anything or anyone - with the exception of his significant other, Diana, who has absolutely nothing to do with the public library other than dating a staff member. He is mostly dismissive of his job and public libraries in general, then comes out with a statement like "This is my life, my passion. I see the road is long, but the road is bright." Huh? I never saw his passion for his work in this book, only his discomfort with the fact of being a librarian, a profession which he apparently finds profoundly "uncool." That's fine - he's not the first librarian I've met who feels that way, but deal with it in therapy, please, not in a tedious, unfunny book.
He makes one mean pronouncement after another about the other employees, then backtracks and says they really do get along, honestly. He tells us he hates teens, hates children, doesn't care for seniors, the homeless, or the developmentally disabled, then states how much he's learned from their nuttiness and ability to make his job more difficult while being endlessly entertaining. At one point in the book he relates how his manager decides to start serving popcorn, which Mr. Douglas find unconscionable - until he doesn't, because, as the manager explains, the kids in his neighborhood could use even the meager nutrition that popcorn delivers. But does he thank his manager for helping him to change his mind about this issue? He does not. He thanks the food: "It took a bit of popcorn and a library snack bar to make me realize that being a librarian was more than just giving people information. It was about serving a community. The food had taught me the true meaning of the word progressive." No, it couldn't possibly be that he'd learned something about compassion from his female boss, it was the food that taught him the lesson.
The way Mr. Douglas talks, you'd think every single library employee was an unmotivated, uneducated slug (except for him). But one of the things I love about working in libraries is working with so many dedicated, well-read, well-informed, enthusiastic people. There are slugs, certainly, as in every profession, but the great majority of people I've worked with, part-time pages to full-time librarians, managers, etc., have really been wonderful. And every library I've worked in has been busy, unlike the silent-as-a-tomb places Mr. Douglas works. Do the people of Anaheim really not use their libraries, or is Mr. Douglas terrified of sounding somehow old-fashioned by spreading the word that even in the 21st century, people (all kinds of people, not just seniors and the homeless) are still using libraries?
Two more things: in one chapter Mr. Douglas speaks of storytime, but refers to the people who conduct those programs as "storytellers." Maybe this is an Anaheim thing, because I've never heard that term used to refer to the person at the front of the room who is reading stories out of a book, only to those performers who are actually "telling" stories from memory. In another weird, and frankly, wrong, use of a word, Mr. Douglas writes, "You say library and there's this iconoclastic image of an old-lady librarian telling people to be quiet and not to run." I think we can all agree that what he really means is "iconic" not "iconoclastic". Did this book not have an editor?
PS: Just like Mr. Douglas, I went to library school while also working at a public library. The best part about that was that I could tell right away what was useless theory and what was useful, practical information, and there was plenty of both. I was doing the work of a reference and Children's librarian before I took a single class, but I was definitely a better librarian after I had taken classes. The point of this is to say that if, like Mr. Douglas, you assert that you didn't learn anything in Library school, then you weren't paying attention. Mr. Douglas also states that "what they hadn't told me in library school was that being a public librarian meant you were a librarian for all people." I rather thought he would have been able to figure that out on his own, since he had actually worked in a public library for years. If you really want to know what it's like to work in a public library, don't waste your time with this book. In his effort to be funny, Mr. Douglas just ends up being mean and petty. He seems like the type of guy who will end up being the grouchy old man on the block who yells at the kids for running on his lawn.