I borrowed a library book this morning on my way to work.
At the railroad station, without a library card. Nor did they ask me to sign anything or show any sort of ID: they just asked what kinds of books I like, handed me a random mystery, and stamped a due date in it.
With record-keeping that loose, I'm considering whether I can return books I didn't borrow, and thus clear out a bit of shelf space.
At the railroad station, without a library card. Nor did they ask me to sign anything or show any sort of ID: they just asked what kinds of books I like, handed me a random mystery, and stamped a due date in it.
With record-keeping that loose, I'm considering whether I can return books I didn't borrow, and thus clear out a bit of shelf space.
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Some libraries do that with paperbacks. Your railroad-station branch -- which probably has a very small and very popular-fiction oriented collection, for commuters who have lots of time to read on the train but not much to spend at the library (thus no time to fuss with stuff like library cards) -- may well be operating on that principle.
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The policy is "take a book, or more than one book, return it or keep it, it's up to you"
I used to have an English teacher in New York that had the same policy and covered the entire back wall of the classroom, floor to ceiling, with bookshelves of paperbacks he'd buy at garage sales each weekend. I have a nice collection of Mad paperbacks, James Bond books etc. that I got that way.
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