Here are two stacked reasons why our house will never be empty of books. The girls and I took the van to a book sale at the small town library John and I lived near as newlyweds (The glamour apartment we stuffed ourselved into, above the pizza place and next to the laudromat on Main Street in Whitney Point, to which I would walk home after unsuccessfully trying to teach twelfth grade high school students how to read). We weren't able to go to the bag sale, but the kind librarian saw the book-lust in my eyes. She held Susannah while I made a tidy stack of wishlist books, and after I started weeding some out, she had pity and gave me a deal. A box of hardcovers for three bucks. Since the hardcover books were supposed to be fifty cents each, I had planned to only spend five dollars, AND I had a zillion books stacked up, I bit. Did I ever. The books were all hardcover, barely used library books. I packed lots away for birthdays and Christmas, including a few My First Little House on the Prairie books and other, until now, library-only favorites of Mildred's. I made an idiot of myself thanking her over and over and over again, and I grinned all the way home. (Stupid materialistic American.)
10.04.2006
Subscribe to:
Post Comments
(
Atom
)
6 comments :
Which library was that?
You say "near" so I assume it wasn't the Whitney Point library itself?
By "near," I mean, of course, just about two buildings down. We lived in a spider-infested, tiny, upper apartment right next to the laundromat that was....right next to the library.
Was the librarian who saw the book lust Mary Lou? I suppose she is retired by now . . .
Sooooooooo jealous right now, looking at the treasures below.
If Mary Ellen is the same librarian I remember from when I was a kid (short, white hair, glasses, and plump lips), then she was the kind lady who gave us a break. Bless her bones!
Hooray for great deals!!!
Pssst... I don't think I could've passed that up, either!! :D
Post a Comment