Thursday, March 26, 2020

A National Emergency Library

The Internet Archive has suspended waitlists for all books in its collection to create a National Emergency Library.

The duration of the NEL is tied to the duration of the pandemic in the United States, but the books are available to readers everywhere.

10 comments:

  1. Thanks, I shared this on my workplace's Facebook page.
    --Fresca

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  2. I was gonna write “Pass it on” in the post, but you already did.

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  3. I signed up and tried to download a book but no joy. Maybe an overwhelmed system. And it's not like I'm short of them. For some reason, I had a sudden hankering to read My Wicked, Wicked Ways, which is buried in a box here somewhere.

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  4. Yeah, they might be overwhelmed. I haven’t tried myself, though I did get a Jane Eyre (for keeps) so that Elaine and I have the same pagination when we read it who-knows-when.

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  5. Jane Eyre!
    Hey--that's a perfect book for plague times---she suffers through an epidemic of---is it typhoid? at her school and loses her best friend to it.
    Have you seen (can you compile?) a books about people living through plague times?
    Besides the obvious ("The Plague")
    I can think of
    "Doomsday Book", by Connie Willis--sci-fi-Lite about a woman in the future who time travels (accidentally) to 1348 England.


    Oh---I just stopped and googled (not really as fun...) and here's a New Yorker article--you've probably seen it:
    https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2020/03/30/what-our-contagion-fables-are-really-about

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  6. Yes, at the beginning. Elaine and I figured that if we’re going to read Wide Sargasso Sea, we’d better go back to Jane Eyre.

    I would think first of The Plague, but I have to admit, I don’t want to revisit it now. But we are reading Pessoa, The Book of Disquiet, which seems to be a good fit.

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  7. I appreciated Wide Sargasso Sea.

    Possibly weird thing: When I was much younger I'd never heard of the Sargasso Sea (to my conscious knowledge), then had a very powerful dream about the "cold Saragasso Sea."

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  8. That wouId be some exceptionally precognitive dreaming. :)

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  9. Tuberculosis affected the Bronte sisters, and even into the early 1900's was a highly contagious plague. My father's eldest brother died of it at age 18.

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  10. One of my great-grandfathers, twenty-seven, in 1896.

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