Newport’s library always checks out
The public library isn’t what it used to be.
Today, when information ranging from the collected works of
William Shakespeare to the latest photos of Mars are available on any
computer hooked up to the Internet, simply providing a vast holding
of books isn’t enough. Newport Beach residents can count themselves
lucky, then, that their central library is so much more.
From its get-go 10 years ago, the library on Avocado Avenue was
designed to do more than stack books row upon row. The
forward-looking designers, armed with $2 million raised by the
community and another $7 million provided by the city, probably could
not have imagined just how ubiquitous technology would become, but
they could not have done much better in preparing the library for our
technology-filled present. The library, for instance, offers Internet
access to its databases (no more walking to the library to see if
they have that book you want) and sends e-mail notifications to
people that their books are due back. You can even apply for a
library card online.
The library also serves wider community needs. It is the site of
the popular Distinguished Speakers Series, for which it provides a
wonderfully intimate, though still extravagant enough, venue. Its
Friends Meeting Room hosts teens one day and book authors the next.
It offers programs for the youngest in the community to the youngest
at heart.
Of course, as cutting edge as a library can be, its central
purpose -- at least for the foreseeable future -- will be as a place
to get books. And the central library is a wealth of reading
material. There are about 70 books by Ernest Hemingway. There are a
few dozen by a poet named Ezra Jack Keats. There are 95 books about
Abraham Lincoln. There are about 40 dealing with the Roman Empire.
More than 20 focus on Hollywood movies. There are in the neighborhood
of 500 by William Shakespeare.
The central library, in other words, is going strong as it
celebrates its 10th anniversary.
Next on the horizon for the city’s library system is the Donna and
John Crean Mariners Branch Library. It will, on a smaller scale,
rival and often surpass what the central library offers. Its
scheduled opening is July 2005. Think thousands will show up as they
did for the central library’s grand kickoff?
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