Many universities and public libraries in Britain are
getting rid of a lot of their stock. Some of this is picked up by big book
warehouses based in obscure industrial estates off ring roads. They operate on
a pile ‘em high and move ‘em on model. The books are sold at very low prices
but listed with minimal description.
If you don’t mind playing lucky dip or you find the markings
in used books have their own fascination anyway, they’re sometimes worth a try.
I’ve received perfectly nice and even unexpectedly signed copies in dustwrapper:
and conversely books that look like they’ve been through a cement mixer, a
sewage plant and a pulping mill one after the other.
I would rather
libraries didn’t have to, or didn’t choose to, get rid of books, but if they
do, I’m glad there are places to take them. And I find the “usual evidence” (as
the booksellers discreetly term it) of the libraries in the books often has a
certain interest. An example is this copy of Surrealism by Roger
Cardinal and Robert Stuart Short in the Studio Vista/Dutton Pictureback series
(1970).
The library stamps show it was variously owned by the North
Riding/Main Library/College of Education Scarborough; the Yorkshire Coast
College/Learning Resource Centre; and the Scarborough TEC/ [Training/Education/Careers]/
College Library, under whose aegis it was withdrawn. There is a mini-history here
of further education in the somewhat louche clifftop town, and at each name change
the book got stamped again.
These stamps are not only on the endpapers but randomly
applied to several illustrated pages, presumably to deter excision. As a consequence,
both Max Ernst’s vast eye and a picture of an anteater are additionally captioned
North Riding Main Library, as if advertising that these manifestations might be
viewed there. Anything’s possible in Scarborough. The Duke of the North
Ridings, incidentally, is a character in Charles Williams'
War in Heaven
(1930), a poet as well a peer, who joins in the guarding of the Grail.
Scarborough was the favourite resort of the Sitwells when
young, and its seaside features (bandstands, punch and judy shows, piers, crumbling
hotels) sometimes appear in their prose and verse. For reasons that now escape
me, I once pitched an arts project that would have involved bursts of Sitwell
poetry being recited to passers-by from hidden machines at street corners and from
the wind shelters on the promenade. I can’t think why it wasn’t taken up.
The final endpaper in the Scarborough Surrealism carries
a white sticker on a white page, like an improvised homage to Kazimir Malevich.
(Mark Valentine)
Are the universities and libraries trying to erase the past or are they just going broke and need the money?
ReplyDeleteIt's mostly lack of funding for staff and storage, but some also say they are clearing obsolete textbooks or that the digital age means physical copies are less consulted.
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