I made a trip to the local library yesterday, something I'd been meaning to do since we moved. Libraries in general are an amazing but underused resource. My earliest memories of libraries were from my hometown in Massachusetts. That was in the 70s, when card catalogs ruled and the giant bookstore was non-existent. I still remember the smell of the books, the feel of flipping through the card catalogs, and the signs for the summer reading contests. I spent hours perusing the shelves, satisfying my curiosity on everything from chess to the occult. Today my interests are more targeted, of course, but I still enjoy browsing the stacks. My goal is to improve my French, and it turned out that the librarian was a former teacher of French as a second language, so I got some great suggestions. What was nice was that the library was busy, this during a weekday afternoon. There were children who had ridden their bikes to the library, and adults perusing the magazines and newspapers. The library itself is small, still there are about 40k books (according to the library website). Most are French, but there is a small English section. I picked up two books on my 'want to read again' list, Foundation and Dune, both in French. So far I've started to read Foundation. It is slow-going, and I have to resist the urge to look up words I don't know. I try to guess their meaning from context, which works sometimes. I asked the librarian about e-books, she said they did not offer any, that she prefers real books. I thought that an interesting stand for a librarian in 2017, but then afterwards I thought some more about it and realized she most certainly prefers to see people in the library. If the library purchased e-books, attendance might drop. I can't say I blame her, I think children especially should be exposed to libraries and real books well before they get a chance to stare at a kindle. The experience of seeing all the books, of being able to pick them up and skim through them is not reproducible in electronic form.