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If police arrest somebody, they'll have to take prints

The Herald reports the keeper of special collections at the BPL in Copley Square has been put on leave as police and now the FBI investigate the disappearance of two valuable prints from the library.

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Check with previous Keepers at Boston Public Library. The Current Keeper of Special Collections is kind, knowledgeable, accessible, helpful, unlike some colleagues at BPL
http://c.o0bg.com/rf/image_1920w/Boston/2011-2020/2015/05/21/BostonGlobe...

see also
http://www.bpl.org/press/

Support BPL's Keeper or grumble about other BPLers at
http://www.bpl.org/general/management.htm
http://www.bpl.org/general/trustees/trustees.htm

Stay tuned for the next Real Sheet newsletter of the B.P.L.P.S.A. Boston Public Library Professional Staff Association or ask for the Real Sheet at a Central or Branch Lib Reference Desk
http://bplpsa.info/contents/?page_id=92

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New York Public Library Guild Local 1930
http://www.local1930.org/

By Svati Kirsten Narula
This Human of New York Takes His Libraries Seriously
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https://www.google.com/search?q=save+nypl+Zadrozny
https://www.google.com/search?q=save+nypl+Zadrozny&tbm=isch

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Or the Herald article?

Accessible and helpful mean something a bit different in the context of the article.

EDIT- "knowledgeable"? You're on a roll today, Don.

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... and supports her, believing she is not guilty of any wrongdoing?

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He has not read the article.

Then again I have a theory he is in fact a computer program that automatically spits out posts to Universal Hub based on certain algorithms.

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It's a bad Eliza program that responds to certain keywords with predictable content.

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that her suspension with pay is because she was the immediate supervisor and she was suspended because she bears ultimate responsibility for the collection. There is no mention or implication that she is a suspect and I would be very cautious in drawing that conclusion from the little information that has been made public.

Thefts from libraries are probably more prevalent than we know and many are discovered only when the item that was stolen appears for sale somewhere.

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Now that most libraries are using better tracking and security systems, I think we are finding both more misfiles and more thefts, some of them decades old. Sometimes simply putting these systems in to place catches problems, since every item must be RFIDed/barcoded/inventoried/whatevered. I would say that since roughly the mid 90's, large libraries and archives have been discovering that items are missing, some of which may actually have been gone a long time.
This is especially true for rarely used collections. And mis-shelves and misfiles can be as damaging as thievery; in a large collection or archive, a misfiled document may as well be lost for good because once the obvious places are checked, only luck will make it turn up again.

BUT-- you're also right in that, before Ebay, unloading a valuable document, or piece of art anonymously wasn't easy. Now we have a virtual illicit art market shopping center online, and you don't even need the dark web.

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heehee

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They are probably just borrowing it. It is a library, after all.

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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1xmAC9Qu908&feature=youtu.be&t=25s

(yes, they actually got away with that on a kids' show....)

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Boston Public Library
Collections of Distinction

About Collections of Distinction
http://www.bpl.org/distinction/about/

Featured Collections of Distinction
http://www.bpl.org/distinction/featured-collections/

. American Civil War 20th Massachusetts Regiment
. American Revolutionary War Era Maps
. Anti-slavery
. Autographs
. Book of Common Prayer
. Boston and New England Maps
. Boston Artists
. Boston Pictorial Archive
. Boston Theater
. Colonial and Revolutionary Boston
. Defoe & Defoeana
. Dwiggins and Graphic Design
. Fine and Historic Bookbindings
. Incunabula
. Irish History and Culture
. John Adams Library
. Local and Family History
. Maritime Charts and Atlases
. Massachusetts Newspapers
. Medieval and Early Renaissance Manuscripts
. Sacco-Vanzetti Defense Committee
. Shakespeare
. Spanish and Portuguese Literature
. Urban Maps

Curator Profiles
http://www.bpl.org/distinction/curator-profiles/

Curator Profiles

Sean Casey
http://www.bpl.org/distinction/curator-profiles/

Benton Collection of Book of Common Prayer

What is your favorite piece/section of the collection? We have first editions from 1549 that I really like. We have many translations, including a Mohawk edition from 1715. The Book of Common Prayer that was published by the Marymount Press (1928) is also a favorite; this book is a work of art from the cover to the typography to the quality of the pages. It is a well-crafted and wonderful edition. The collection has a lot of high-quality bookbindings as well.

Describe something surprising in the collection. We have over 100 translations of the book – some of the languages included are Latin, Chinese, Turkish, and some Polynesian dialects.

What specific audiences might this collection appeal to? It appeals to theologians and those interested in the religious history of England but also people interested in bookmaking and binding. I love interacting with the patrons – you can learn a great deal about the collections from them.

Spanish and Portuguese Literature Collection

What do you like most about being a curator? I enjoy the interactions with researchers. Their enthusiasm for the work they are doing and for the BPL’s collections is infectious. I am constantly learning from people who use our collections.

What is your favorite piece/section of the collection? Some of my favorite items in the Spanish and Portuguese Literature Collection are the early editions of Don Quixote(1605), and the handwritten manuscript of Lope de Vega’s El Castigo sin Venganza.

Describe something surprising in the collection. I was surprised to find that many of the volumes in the Spanish and Portuguese Literature Collection are first editions and handwritten manuscripts that are exceedingly rare, and for that reason we receive many researchers and requests from around the world.

What specific audiences might this collection appeal to? The Spanish and Portuguese Literature Collection appeals to anybody interested in Spanish, Portuguese, and Latin American literature and history, including art, science, law, and theology.

American Civil War 20th Massachusetts Regiment Collection

What is your favorite piece/section of the collection? I really enjoy showing off the Winslow Homer painting “Officers at Camp Benton.” It is a wonderful oil painting that came to the BPL as part of the 20th Massachusetts Regiment Collection.

Describe something surprising in the collection. I was surprised to find the 20th American Civil War 20th Massachusetts Regiment Collection has about 50 hand-written diaries and personal narratives of soldiers that served during the Civil War, including the handwritten diaries of Capt. William A. Noel from Libby Prison, June 12, 1863-March 23, 1864. Also, our most requested items from this collection are two photographs of Frances L. Clalin, a woman who served as a man in the Civil War. In one photograph, she is dressed in female attire, and in the other, she is dressed as a soldier.

What specific audiences might this collection appeal to? The American Civil War 20th Massachusetts Regiment Collection appeals to anybody interested in the Civil War and the social history of Massachusetts during the war. These letters that the officers and soldiers sent home, and the letters they received in return, provide a wide view of life both on the battlefield and on the Massachusetts home front.
http://www.bpl.org/distinction/curator-profiles/
________________________________

Susan Glover
http://www.bpl.org/distinction/curator-profiles/

Trent Collection of Defoe and Defoeana

What is your favorite piece/section of the collection? It is hard to choose one thing; Defoe is such an important writer and was in many ways the father of the novel as well as an important political pamphleteer and rabble-rouser. We did add something new to the collection which I particularly like; we have a wonderful poster from a late nineteenth-century French umbrella company that is a big picture of Robinson Crusoe with a palm frond umbrella and many French umbrellas dancing around the picture. It’s this kind of iconic imagery that has been and will be with us forever.

Describe something surprising in the collection. I grow to expect things to be in the collection because it is so comprehensive. I get surprised when someone offers something and it is not there. We added the first German edition of Robinson Crusoe recently and I was surprised we didn’t have it.

What specific audiences might this collection appeal to? Graduate students, faculty, and independent scholars are the most frequent users of the collection.

Incunabula Collection

What do you like most about being a curator? I love working with our amazing collections and discovering something new every day that I either did not know we had, or in some cases, I had never seen before.

What is your favorite piece/section of the collection? I don’t actually have any “favorites,” but Hypnerotomachia Poliphili, printed by Aldus Manutius in 1499, is one of the most beautiful books ever produced in any age.

Describe something surprising in the collection. I think viewers would be surprised that books of this age were printed on 100% rag paper and look as crisp and white today as the day they were printed, even though they are more than 500 years old.

What specific audiences might this collection appeal to? This collection appeals especially to design students studying the history of the book or the history of printing types, but it contains many interesting and beautiful books that would engage a general audience.

Colonial and Revolutionary Boston Collection

What is your favorite piece/section of the collection? This collection has enormous strengths in administrative and judicial records and includes documents signed by George Washington, John Adams, Paul Revere, and so many other early Patriots. One item that always gives me chills is the True Copie of the Court Booke of the Governor and Society of the Massachusetts Bay in New England (1628-1645). It is a record of the founding of the Massachusetts Bay Colony and documents the activities of the first 17 years of its existence, from the planning in London to the supplying and landing of the ships, to the settling in Massachusetts and establishment of the businesses as well as laws.

Describe something surprising in the collection I think that visitors are often surprised that records like town minutes are far from dry and can be fascinating accounts of the Colonial era.

What specific audiences might this collection appeal to? This collection appeals to a wide audience, including students of political, legal, economic, and social history.

Medieval and Early Renaissance Manuscripts

What is your favorite piece/section of the collection? There are so many important and beautiful manuscripts in the collection, but I am especially enamored with the extraordinary Book of Hours that is so beautifully decorated with exquisite miniatures, foliated borders, and illuminations.

Describe something surprising in the collection. Visitors are always amazed by the size of the Antiphonaries that were used by the church choirs and are more than two feet high and bound with the original metal bosses and corners, giving the impression of an armored book.

What specific audiences might this collection appeal to? This collection appeals to a broad audience who appreciate the beauty and craft of these ancient works.

Shakespeare

What is your favorite piece/section of the collection? As a literature major as an undergraduate, I took all the Shakespeare courses. It was a thrill to find so many of them in this collection that were printed during Shakespeare’s lifetime. But, it still gives me goose bumps to bring out the First Folio to show visitors. The First Folio, published seven years after Shakespeare’s death, gathered all of Shakespeare’s works together for the first time and is still the definitive edition of 18 of his plays.

Describe something surprising in the collection. I think visitors are surprised about many authors there were publishing plays during Shakespeare’s time; Christopher Marlowe and Ben Jonson to name a few.

What specific audiences might this collection appeal to? It is a rare person who has not been touched by one of Shakespeare’s plays, either through study or popular forms of expression. His work continues to resonate with large portions of the population, his plays are still taught in both in middle school and high school, as well as college and graduate school, and the works themselves continue to be produced as stage productions and movies.
http://www.bpl.org/distinction/curator-profiles/

________________________________

Kimberly Reynolds
http://www.bpl.org/distinction/curator-profiles/

Mellen Chamberlain Collection of Autographs

What is your favorite piece/section of the collection? There are some great Colonial documents in there from the Revolutionary War period; just outstanding pieces. It also contains some really beautiful Quaker documents that question and challenge the idea of religious tolerance. An early survey plot done by George Washington is my favorite; we believe he mapped this at the age of eighteen.

Describe something surprising in the collection. There is a small collection of letters from Elizabeth Palmer to her husband Joseph. Palmer was the grandmother of the famous Peabody sisters of Salem. Her husband, Joseph Pearse Palmer, participated in the Boston Tea Party. These letters provide great insight into what life was like for Colonial women.

What specific audiences might this collection appeal to? The collection is so vast that there really is something in there for everyone. There is quite a bit of material from the Revolutionary War that interests researchers. There are several important documents from the Salem witchcraft trials that almost everyone finds fascinating.

Anti-slavery Collection

What do you like most about being a curator? I think the better question is what do I like most about working in the Rare Books and Manuscripts department. That’s easy – every day is an adventure into something new. Whether it is learning that we have a first edition of Moby-Dick, reading the original poems that Emily Dickinson sent to Thomas Wentworth Higginson for his opinion, or processing an archival collection, there is always something to marvel at.

What is your favorite piece/section of the collection? Because these collections are so deep and rich, it is difficult to name any one piece; however, in the Anti-slavery Collection, Deborah Weston’s diary stands because it provides insights into her personal life that her letters do not.

Describe something surprising in the collection. The actual lock that was used to lock William Lloyd Garrison’s jail cell came as a surprise. Garrison was put in jail for his own safety from a lynch mob of angry Bostonians who did not agree with his abolitionist views.

What specific audiences might this collection appeal to? The collection appeals to college, and graduate students as well as scholars and researchers.
Is there something about the collection I didn’t ask that library visitors might want to know? The Anti-slavery Collection is fairly straight forward, but the most asked question is which abolitionists letters are represented in the collection.

Sacco-Vanzetti Defense Committee Collection

What is your favorite piece/section of the collection? Because these collections are so deep and rich, it is difficult to name any one piece; however, in the Sacco-Vanzetti Defense Committee Collection are some very striking protest posters from Europe and South America.

Describe something surprising in the collection. The protest posters in the Sacco-Vanzetti Defense Committee Collection came as a great surprise in that they document international reactions to the trial.

What specific audiences might this collection appeal to? The collection appeals to a diverse audience from to college, and graduate students as well as anarchists, authors, scholars and researchers and those who are just curious about the men and the trial.

Is there something about the collection I didn’t ask that library visitors might want to know? People are always interested in knowing what death-masks are and why we have them in the Sacco-Vanzetti Defense Committee Collection.

Boston Theater Collection

What is your favorite piece/section of the collection? The Boston Theater Collection includes hundreds of playbills that reflect the dynamic theater culture in 19th century Boston and is the only comprehensive history of Boston theater in the city.

Describe something surprising in the collection. The playbills in the Boston Theater Collection are simply amazing. The collection also contains programs, reviews, production material, costume and set designs.

What specific audiences might this collection appeal to? The collection appeals to college, and graduate students as well as scholars and researchers. Also theater enthusiasts would love this collection.
http://www.bpl.org/distinction/curator-profiles/

________________________________

Henry Scannell
http://www.bpl.org/distinction/curator-profiles/

Massachusetts Newspapers

What is your favorite piece/section of the collection? The illustrated papers; Ballou’s Pictorials. Newspapers close to the twentieth century contain wonderful woodcuts and engravings that have a period charm of their own.
Describe something surprising in the collection.I marvel at the Liberty Overseas edition of the Boston Herald, published from 1943 to 1946. The complete paper was printed for our troops overseas at 9×6 inches in order to save shipping space and weight.

What specific audiences might this collection appeal to? A general audience – historians and geneaologists use it, but we also have nearly every paper under the sun. It’s both a historical and current collection – we have today’s paper and those from 300 years ago.

Local and Family History

What do you like most about being a curator? I enjoy finding surprising items within the collection. It can be like working in the largest attic in the city with all sorts of interesting items to discover.

What is your favorite piece/section of the collection? The local town histories are my favorite part. Every town in the area has had something interesting that has happened over the past 300 years or so.

Describe something surprising in the collection. Several government documents in the collection surprise me. My favorite example is the first census from Sitka, Alaska after the US Army took over the territory in the 1860s. It was compiled by the US Army, not the Census Bureau, and is extremely detailed about the residents of Sitka at the time.

What specific audiences might this collection appeal to? I believe this collection appeal to all residents of Massachusetts and New England, or those with ancestors who lived here.

Is there something about the collection I didn’t ask that library visitors might want to know? This collection complements many other Collections of Distinction. Investigating the Local & Family History collection can give viewers clues about customs and ways of life hundreds of years ago and can add interest to your day, especially as you explore Boston by foot.
http://www.bpl.org/distinction/curator-profiles/

________________________________

Karen Shafts
http://www.bpl.org/distinction/curator-profiles/

Boston Artists

What do you like about being a curator?
I love working with the actual art objects. My degrees are in art history and early on I decided I wanted to do museum work. I’ve been at the library for 28 years. It is particularly exciting to be working with contemporary artists; Boston is an active and dynamic art city, especially in printmaking. The library’s Boston Artists collection was founded because other institutions were not collecting contemporary Boston artists. It has been our focus to gain recognition for the artists who are working here in Boston.

What is your favorite piece/section of the collection?
There is wonderful variety in the collection. I find fascinating the work of Harold Tovish, who was a sculptor and taught at BU – he also did wonderful drawings and prints. He had a great sensibility for creating three dimensions on a two-dimensional surface. Sidney Hurwitz also taught at BU. Sidney takes images from industrial sights around Boston and the country as the subjects for his prints.

Describe something surprising in the collection.
A source of continuing surprises is the work of Angela Lorenz, who is a book artist. Angela develops her books as three-dimensional forms. She creates books that are a combination of text and image, but also are sculptures. The Hat Makes the Man is an example. She is very inventive and creates works that truly are unique.

What specific audiences might this collection appeal to?
The collection attracts a wide audience – as young as middle school and high school classes to colleges and universities. We have collectors who come in to compare impressions of prints they own or are considering acquiring. Patrons who have inherited prints or have purchased prints that have caught their eye come in to research the prints and ask questions about them. We also have an active program with scholars and curators who are working on books or putting together exhibitions.
http://www.bpl.org/distinction/curator-profiles/

________________________________

Ronald Grim
http://www.bpl.org/distinction/curator-profiles/

Urban Maps Collection

What do you like most about being a curator? I’ve been interested in geography, maps, and traveling since I was a kid. I love constantly learning and exploring. I’ve always been the navigator on family trips since I was little and fascinated by maps.

What is your favorite piece/section of the collection? There are more than 500 bird’s eye-view maps in this collection; other than the Library of Congress, it’s the largest collection of this kind. There are a number of unique items; it is definitely a strong collection.

Describe something surprising in the collection. The collection includes a map of Paris from 1739 by Louis Bretez – its detail is fascinating.

What specific audiences might this collection appeal to? I think the general public would have a strong interest in the collection because the maps tell the history of the city.

Boston and New England Maps Collection

What is your favorite piece/section of the collection? The collection contains John Bonner’s map of Boston (first published in 1722) that was issued in ten different editions, of which the Library has three. It’s extremely important for documenting Boston’s history.

Describe something surprising in the collection.We haveCharles Pinney’s fire insurance atlas from 1861, which is the earliest for Boston. Not many other organizations have these kinds of Boston records.

What specific audiences might this collection appeal to? This is a very comprehensive collection; we have a large number of researchers interested in it, including people who want to learn where businesses where located from that area, or where their relatives may have lived.

What is your favorite piece/section of the collection? There are more than 500 bird’s eye-view maps in this collection; other than the Library of Congress, it’s the largest collection of this kind. There are a number of unique items; it is definitely a strong collection.

American Revolutionary War Era Maps

What is your favorite piece/section of the collection? The collection includes a powder horn inscribed with a map of Boston that is dated from 1775 by a British soldier, which includes the phrase “A pox on the rebels in their crimes.” It is quite interesting to get a perspective of a British soldier during the American Revolutionary War.

Describe something surprising in the collection. It contains a French edition of a Gulf Stream map (dating to 1776) that was given to the BPL by the great great grandson of Benjamin Franklin. To have something that was used by Benjamin Franklin is pretty remarkable.

What specific audiences might this collection appeal to? Historians and the general public will definitely find this collection of interest. We are working to make is as accessible as possible; it is digitized and on the Map Center website and can be viewed in person.

Maritime Charts and Atlases

What is your favorite piece/section of the collection? Frederick Des Barres’ Atlantic Neptune charts were developed just before the Revolutionary War and give a great perspective on that time period (1771-1781). A significant amount of these are digitized and available on the Map Center’s website for all to enjoy.

Describe something surprising in the collection. It includes a 1620 portolan atlas (with seven charts) that was drawn on velum – it’s amazing to think that people sailed hundreds of years ago with the maps we now have here at the Map Center.

What specific audiences might this collection appeal to? The collection really has something for everyone to enjoy, from a general audience to academics interested in the northeastern coast pre-19th century.
http://www.bpl.org/distinction/curator-profiles/

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Beth Prindle
http://www.bpl.org/distinction/curator-profiles/

John Adams Library

What do you like most about being a curator? I find that curating a historic collection provides a very real and powerful link between past and present. When I hold one of John Adams’ books, I know he held that exact book as well several hundred years ago and the book is able to span those centuries and connect us in a very moving way.

What is your favorite piece/section of the collection? I like them all for different reasons, but there are ones that I feel very personally tied to. John Adams’ copy of a book by Plutarch is near and dear to my heart because there were pressed tree leaves between the back pages that had been left undisturbed for two centuries.

Describe something surprising in the collection. I’m still surprised by the sheer volume of John Adams’ book collecting and reading habits. He started in his teens and collected and read avidly throughout his adult life until his death at the age of 90.

What specific audiences might this collection appeal to? I find John Adams much more broadly relatable than many of the Founding Fathers. John Adams is really the embodiment of the quintessential American dream.

Is there something about the collection I didn’t ask that library visitors might want to know? There’s been such a wave of interest in John Adams with David McCullough’s 2001 biography John Adams and the HBO miniseries that people nationwide are really hungering to learn more about him and his family.
http://www.bpl.org/distinction/curator-profiles/

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Mary Frances O’Brien, Retired
http://www.bpl.org/distinction/curator-profiles/

Irish History and Culture Collection

What do you like most about being a curator? It has been fun to dive back into the Irish History and Culture Collection and explore it in more detail. I researched acquisition files from the library in its earliest days and discovered the BPL did not start really building the collection until the late 20th century.

What is your favorite piece/section of the collection? My favorite section of the Irish History and Culture Collection are the pamphlets from the 19th and 20th centuries. Most of the pieces are related to the Irish fight for independence and the materials are extremely fragile due to the fact that they were mass produced quite cheaply.

Describe something surprising in the collection. Some of the earliest materials in the Irish History and Culture Collection, including the 1798 collection, came through special collections dealers in Ireland and include materials gathered over decades of collecting.

What specific audiences might this collection appeal to? I believe the Irish History and Culture Collection is of special interest to high school and college students. The materials in the collection go beyond the study of ethnic identity to the universal exploration of human rights and political movements, especially in the 1970s and 1980s.
http://www.bpl.org/distinction/curator-profiles/

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Stuart Walker, Retired
http://www.bpl.org/distinction/curator-profiles/

Fine and Historic Bookbindings Collection

What do you enjoy about being the curator of this collection? I love observing beautiful and unique examples of the bookbinder’s craft and artistry spanning more than 500 years, and being part of the conservation and preservation of rare and fragile surviving examples of early publishers’ bindings that are in danger of being lost due to a lack of awareness of their significance.

What is your favorite piece/section of the collection? Decorated 19th-century publishers’ bindings, especially those designed by the Boston artist Sarah Wyman Whitman.

Describe something surprising in the collection. The Library has an incredible collection of fine, rare, and unique bookbindings, free and open to all, and that it holds examples of early cloth bindings that were previously unrecorded. The oldest book is over a thousand years old.

What specific audiences might this collection appeal to? Book historians and collectors, artists and designers, students of the Industrial Revolution (machine-made books and the rise of literacy and the middle class), and students of popular culture as reflected in changes in mass-marketed books and their design. Past exhibits of elaborately decorated bookbindings in the Rare Book reception room have been very popular.

Dwiggins and Graphic Design Collection

What do you enjoy about being the curator of this collection? I enjoy working with the students and researchers who use this collection and introducing Dwiggins as both an important graphic designer, and as a bright and magnetic personality to BPL visitors.

What is your favorite piece/section of the collection? The marionettes and other realia, including the “Puterschein” pitcher.

Describe something surprising in the collection. It is interesting to me that Dwiggins coined the term “graphic designer,” that at least two of his typefaces have been adapted for digital use and are still popular, and that he created his marionettes for fun in his spare time.

What specific audiences might this collection appeal to? Graphic artists, type font designers, art and design students, calligraphers, and puppeteers. The marionettes have a nearly universal appeal.

Is there something about the collection I didn’t ask that library visitors might want to know? People are usually unaware of, and then very enthusiastic about, the fact that they don’t have to be somebody “special” to look at the treasures in the Special Collections – we place only reasonable and relatively minor security restrictions on their use of the reading room. Another point is that local college classes regularly create scholarly exhibits of real value from varying collections of materials in Rare Books and Special Collections – often resulting in a learning experience for Library staff as well as patrons. I spent 31 years being constantly surprised and amazed at the things I discovered and learned at the BPL.
http://www.bpl.org/distinction/curator-profiles/

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