Growing up in a small-town, the library was within walking distance of our house, so I frequently made the trip alone (this was the late 70s, and as my fellow Gen-X'ers can attest, kids did things like that then). Down our own street, up the sidewalk to the center of town, and across main street, then in the back door. Past a water fountain and into the library proper, the smell of the books hit you as soon as you opened the heavy inner doors. I remember the card catalogs in the center of the library, arrayed like a wheel. I felt such a sense of accomplishment when, after opening a few long drawers, and flipping through dozens of cards, the one book title or author I was looking for came into view. I hurriedly wrote down the information on a small, cut-up piece of scrap paper with a little stub of a pencil, and ran to sleuth out the correct bookcase and shelf. Then of course the books. I could browse the shelves for what seemed like hours, just skimming through whatever interested me. After a while I'd have gathered a stack of books and I'd take it up to the front desk, library card in hand. One at a time, the librarian would take a due-date card out of each book, stamp it crookedly inside the next open rectangle in black ink (one of those rotating date stamps that you had to press into the ink pad every few presses), and slide it back in. Then I'd tuck the pile under my arm and walk back home. A fond memory that I recognize as pure nostalgia. Libraries today are much more than simple book depositories. My old library has grown up, as it were. It's now much bigger and offers computers, internet access, resume advice, technical help, videos, ebooks, and community gatherings. Not that I visit much anymore, living in another country. My current local library is quite a bit smaller than my old hometown library, and most of the books are in French. So it's not as useful to me as I would like.