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Afraid of the library...
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I always get a little paralyzed by the fiction section too. Last time I used the library, I searched their catalog online before going, so I'd know what they had that I wanted and could just go right to it and get it. Our library isn't conducive to spending the day in. It's cramped, and there's no place to sit near the fiction section (which is a room of its own; a very cramped room).


This is an interesting question. I once worked in a bookstore, and there were always people who would come straight to the information desk to ask for a book rather than check the shelves themselves. Others would get seriously rattled if a book was misfiled. I guess it makes sense that thousands of items lined up in order could be overwhelming--marketers get that, hence the bookstore practice of breaking things down into multiple small categories--new releases, bestsellers, books everyone should read, celebrity bios, military bios, hot teen titles, etc., plus all the different genre sections.
Libraries are very accommodating though. You can always find out what they have on hand by checking their website or calling ahead. If they don't have what you want, they can almost always get it for you. They will even hold the book for you up front so you don't have to go to the stacks to get it yourself. There are also reader advisory services for when you don't know what you want.

also have to agree on the whole time limitations that they place, it really takes the fun out of it if you can read at our leisure.

I'm with you there. It's half the fun to me: taking a stroll, gazing at interesting covers and blurbs.

If you are computer savvy, learn to use the library catalog. If you aren't, grab a librarian and ask for help. They really like that. Most libraries are part of a larger system--they share one big collection. If the book you want isn't on the shelf, it may be at one of the other branches or at another library in the consortium. Just ask. They'll have it sent over.
As to having to bring it back by a certain day, those dates are generous and extendable. It ain't Nexflix, but understand that someone else may be wanting to read that book too. If it's just sitting around your house waiting for the fit to take you, you really aren't being fair to the guy across town who is in despair and contemplating ordering the book himself from Amazon because you seem to have skipped town with the library copy. If it turns out you aren't going to have time to read it in the near future, just take it back and borrow it again when you're ready. Or hang onto it and pay the fine, which is tiny. The library just wants you to enjoy the book and bring it back when you are done. What they don't want is you forgetting that you even have the book (yes, I've done that) and losing it among your own stacks. It's a very generous and entirely benevolent system.
Having said all that, I have stacks of books that I have bought myself. I buy them pretty much on impulse and read them when the fit takes me. I rarely borrow fiction because I am impulsive in my choices, which often have to be made between finishing one book and setting the alarm clock before going to sleep. I hoard. I have enough deadlines and running around on errands in my life. Convenience often wins out over free with me, but I know people who gleefully sign up at the library for the hot titles as they come out and are more than happy to drop the clutter in the return box when they are done.
Always nice to have options.

Then I feld.

Then I feld."
Feld? Tripped while fleeing? Been there and done that. Which books did you grab?

I liked feld. (Good definition, EG.) It's the way I'd type fled.


Interesting choices.

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It's big. It's so big and it has the little science fiction section and the foreign section, but the rest is just in one big group. It's not in nice little sections like non-fiction. I can't look at a sign on the wall and go to exactly the place I need. It's just too big.
I can do the bookshelves in charity books, because I can just look at the spine of every book. I can do shopping online because of all the wonderful searching features. It's just the chaos that scares me.
Am I a complete nut job? Do other people feel like this?