About five miles from the Rice University campus is the Library Service Center (LSC), the Fondren Library’s off-site storage facility. It houses some 1,140,000 items, mostly books – about one-third of the library’s total collection. From the outside, the building has the conspicuous anonymity of a military installation. Inside, it suggests Borges’ “Library of Babel.”
Every week I
order books from the LSC and they arrive hours later. I have been doing that
since I first went to work for Rice in 2006. It’s a remarkable, reliable
service I never take for granted. This week I was invited to tour the facility
and meet the people who run it. Shelver/Driver Rosalba Benavides shook my hand and
said, “It’s good to meet our favorite customer.” The LSC manager, James
Springer, suggested they order a rubber stamp with my name on it.
Basically, the
LSC is a highly organized warehouse. The stacks are mostly thirty shelves high.
All books are boxed and the boxes and shelves are labeled. The upper shelves
are reached with the use of a forklift. Seen from the bottom of these canyons
of books, you might mistake the stock for shoes. The temperature is kept at 50°F,
humidity at 30 percent.
Borges often
pictured paradise as a vast library, as in his prologue to “Catalog of the
Exhibition Books from Spain” (trans. Suzanne Jill Levine, Selected Non-Fictions, 1999):
“Each in his
own way imagines Paradise; since childhood I have envisioned it as a library.
Not as an infinite library, because anything infinite is somewhat uncomfortable
and puzzling, but as a library fit for a man. A library in which there will
always be books (and perhaps shelves) to discover, but not too many. In brief,
a library that would allow for the pleasure of rereading, the serene and
faithful pleasure of the classics, or the gratifying shock of revelation and of
the foreseen.”
Great write up Sir!!! Glad to finally meet you!
ReplyDeleteJames