I am trying to weed the children's fiction, weed and integrate the paperback children's fiction into the hardcovers, and shift the whole section. And from the way it looks now, once I finish (if I ever finish) I will have to RE-SHIFT the section to space it out properly.
I am getting rid of a TON of fiction from the 70s through 90s and trying not to whimper. I loved many of these books--heck, I BOUGHT a lot of these books for the library. But they are not getting used and they are just taking up shelf space.
The patrons I am dealing with either want:
1)The most current bestselling children's fiction, most of which I buy.
2)The most current children's paperback series, a lot of which I don't, because today's popular series is usually the one left rotting on your shelves in a year or two--that is if all your copies don't get stolen.
3)Standard classics and books that are on school reading lists.
In other words, I can't keep a retrospective collection, but rather, I have to have something that looks like the local bookstores. Which, I fear, is where a lot of the folks that SHOULD be using the library are going.
This job would be a lot easier if it wasn't for the fact that the girls who are SUPPOSED to shelve our books seem to be missing the point of it all. I mean, who cares about putting the authors in order? Who cares if you mix up picture books, beginning readers, young adult books and even adult books on the shelves? I mean, like, you know, if you put the books on a shelf, ANY shelf, that should be enough, right?
WRONG!
And with that anguished cry, I return you to your normal Friday activities.......................