Setup

The van that we took to BM was very full (plus four passengers).

 

Very full van

Very full van

Which meant that there was no room for for bookshelves. What to do? Around day two, we figured out that empty water jugs, sufficiently modified, make pretty good shelves. If you cut the top off at the right angle, you are left with the handle, which allows you to hang the bookshelves from a car or tarp. These containers are just about right for a mass market paperback, and a little cramped for taller formats such as graphic novels.

The library sign works!

The library sign works! It draws new patrons like moths to a flame!

The Burning Library ended up being less of a reading room and more of a lending library. Patrons loved to browse the collection, but generally took items with them rather than staying to read them. Fellow dancing librarian Amanda asked whether it still counts as a library if the patrons are keeping the books instead of borrowing them. My response to this question would be that it is indeed a library, but one that follows the ‘distributed collection’ model. 

In this case, by taking books with them, patrons extend the collection in physical space. Rather than being confined to a suitcase, or a few water jugs, the collection becomes spread across North America (and perhaps further). The patrons have been asked to pass each item along when they are done with it. In identifying new users for the collection and sharing items, patrons actively promote access to information. In a sense, they become the librarians. This shifting of responsibility and power from one individual to many seems appropriate to the spirit of Burning Man as a whole.

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Burning Down the House

Now that I am back in the land of internet, I am looking forward to unpacking some of the magnificence of the burning man/ burning library experience. I think there’s a lot to be talked about, so it will probably end up being a series of posts, in no particular order of relevance.

Getting to Burning Man was an interesting exercise in efficient packing, patience, and giving up personal space. The unusually long dust storm on the night we drove in meant that we ended up spending half the night in a parking lot. Which was better than it sounds, because people were overcoming their driving frustrations and getting to know one another (read: multiple dance parties). The upshot of this was that we ended up in a great spot, camping beside a fabulous bunch of people.

Wayfinding

When I woke up the next morning to discover our neighbour’s van emblazoned with ‘Stop Making Cents’, it was confirmed that coming to Black Rock City was like coming home. In addition to Talking Heads fans, our immediate neighbours included one library student and a librarian’s daughter!

Most of the first two days were spent setting up the camp and getting to know our way around the neighbourhood. For the record, Black Rock City is the most confusing environment I have ever encountered. I think the only rival in my experience would be bustling Mumbai –  and almost everyone in BRC was speaking English! So Jessamyn West was indeed addressing a need by offering reference services there (which raises some questions for me about librarianship’s service orientation – more thoughts on that later).

The first task was letting people know we were there! We had some cardboard boxes that we used for packing, some dowelling originally intended for nunchaku, a scarf, duct tape and an extra bottle of water. Which resulted in the infamously fabulous library sign.

 

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Bradbury Strikes Again

Do libraries have mascots? Can mascots be books? If they do and they can, then ours would be this classic of classics – Farenheit 451! Hooray for our newest addition, complete with image of a burning man on the cover.

Thanks to Michael for classing up the collection.

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Storytelling & Codebreaking

Neil Stephenson’s Cryptonomicon and Storytelling and the Art of Imagination by Nancy Mellon are the two newest members of the Burning Library family. Awwwwww!!!!

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Burning LibraryThing

The Burning Library now has an online book catalogue! Check out LibraryThing for the goodness.

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It’s a girl/boy!

Amidst tears of joy and cries of jubilation, the Burning Library was born on Wednesday, June 11th, 2008 at 12:30pm – sort of. That was when I arrived home to discover a note from Canada Post on my door, telling me I had missed a delivery. It was actually around 5:55pm on Thursday June 12th that I got my grubby little hands on the unexpected donation from Emily in Toronto. So, without further ado, the very first items to be catalogued by the Burning Library are:

Introducing Quantum Theory graphic novel by J.P McEvoy and Oscar Zarate

The Cat Who Loved Christmas…and other stories by Chapin, Christensen, Ewing et al.

T-Rex III: Rex in the Amazon by W. Howard Stuart

Teh Awesome Book of Japanese Friendship Bracelets (Not the original title, but that is in Japanese)

Also, there were cookies, but I ate them.

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