The Library World Volume 43 Issue 9
Abstract
TRAGEDY has touched many libraries in the past few weeks, but the really sporting manner in which has been met the worst that the Nazi bomber can do places librarians, we hope, fully in line with our people. Roofless rooms have been patched, sometimes merely with canvas and felt, empty houses have been taken over, and by similar expedients even in the worst places a library service has been continued. It has been used, too. There is no fear for the future of the book and reading, whatever difficulties impede them. It has become almost commonplace that reading is a main employment of war leisure; but we still have to get that over to the powers that be. Or have we? The Board of Education wrote to local authorities asking them to maintain and even to extend library facilities as their value in war was enhanced. Some have responded.
Citation
(1941), "The Library World Volume 43 Issue 9", New Library World, Vol. 43 No. 9, pp. 145-160. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb009241
Publisher
:MCB UP Ltd
Copyright © 1941, MCB UP Limited