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kaixv's review
5.0
Graphic: Fire/Fire injury
Moderate: Homophobia, Racism, and Terminal illness
Minor: Death, Drug use, Pedophilia, and Death of parent
thefooddater's review
5.0
Graphic: Fire/Fire injury
Minor: Homophobia, Dementia, and Death of parent
sarahb919's review against another edition
4.5
Graphic: Grief and Fire/Fire injury
Moderate: Drug use, Homophobia, Sexism, and Terminal illness
Minor: Violence, Death of parent, Sexual harassment, and Classism
sapphicsoilscientist's review
Moderate: Homophobia
librerin's review against another edition
5.0
Minor: Drug use, Homophobia, Mental illness, and Cultural appropriation
akvolcano's review against another edition
3.5
Graphic: Fire/Fire injury
Moderate: Grief
Minor: Ableism, Hate crime, Homophobia, Misogyny, Pedophilia, Racial slurs, Sexism, Transphobia, Forced institutionalization, Medical content, Religious bigotry, Murder, Outing, Toxic friendship, and War
shirlev's review
4.25
I can have a little vocational awe*, as a treat. This was an engrossing read about libraries, probably made more beautiful by the fact that it wasn't written by a librarian. There's definitely room to prod at the author's starry-eyed view of libraries as quasi-religious spaces staffed by priests of knowledge, but I don't think it's especially egregious.
I liked her treatment of Harry Peak, though I wish there had been a little bit more grappling with the connection between his seemingly pathological lying and his family's homophobia. The end of the Peak's story is unsatisfying, but that's what draws me to non-fiction in the first place- the challenge of making meaning when constrained by (what we think of as) the truth.
The weaving together of the three major threads (the fire, the broader history of the LAPL, and the current day workings of the LAPL) was a little clunky, and I'm not sure how much it actually added to present it in this way. Maybe the sections on the current day library are more interesting to people outside of the library world, for me they were the least interesting part of the story.
Overall, a great little book to hopefully ease me back into regular reading.
*If you are a librarian, or work in the "helping professions" (healthcare, education, religion, etc), or care about people who do, you need to read Fobazi Ettarh's "Vocational Awe and Librarianship: The Lies We Tell Ourselves". https://www.inthelibrarywiththeleadpipe.org/2018/vocational-awe/
Graphic: Fire/Fire injury
Minor: Homophobia
ncoletti's review against another edition
4.0
Moderate: Homophobia and Fire/Fire injury
fkshg8465's review
4.0
Graphic: Fire/Fire injury
Minor: Homophobia
hanz's review against another edition
3.0
The history parts were my favourite and there were a lot of interesting facts about the people involved in the early stages of the library.
Occasionally hard to follow because it jumped around a lot and I found that some of the chapters ended quite abruptly and didn't really have a conclusion to add to the overall point of the book, however I'm relatively new to non fiction so could just be me.
The author also repeated used either he or she to refer to an arbitrary person, which was a little jarring and felt out of place with some of the themes of the book.
Graphic: Fire/Fire injury
Moderate: Child death, Chronic illness, Death, Infidelity, Sexism, Terminal illness, and Antisemitism
Minor: Homophobia and Racism