A month and two weeks have passed since we made our move West
to what might be called the Lake District adjoining Metro Detroit. It took that
long since, yesterday, I braved an awesome traffic circle (a new one, and they’re
very popular on new roads around here) to find our new library, formally the
Commerce Township Community Library or, in modernese, CTCL. CTCL is associated
to something that calls itself the The Library Network (TLN), made up of 65
regional libraries that, together, share a common catalog. The catalog is much
more complicated and, initially, more difficult to use. The advantage is that
one can order books from a rather large number of libraries and, patience
playing its role, have it delivered at the nearest one to us. That practice, Brigitte reminds me, is called
an ILL, an inter-librart loan. I noted, this morning, that the larger libraries
in our region, of which the Grosse Pointe System is one, do not participate in
TLN. Nor does the most serious near one, the Southfield Public Library, an
awesome library known to me because our offices once were near there. Alas.
A while back we spent a couple of weeks here at Monique’s “house
sitting” for a spell. At that time, about a year or so ago, I noticed that the
CTCL had had its DVD collection interfiled with books. Such an arrangement
produces major problems, of course. Most films, do not have “authors” in the
strict sense of the word. I did manage to find some of the Agatha Christy DVDs
under C for Christy (or was it under A for Agatha? I forget.) In any case, I
told Brigitte at the time that should we ever move West, I’d certainly volunteer
to organize the Commerce films using separate shelves. Little did I suspect the
problems I might encounter doing so.
Well, it turns out, they’ve actually done that job in the meanwhile.
Some free space (and the library is pleasantly roomy) has now been equipped
with shelves; all of the movies are now together. The classification system is
by the title of the movie—which makes good sense. Commerce evidently uses the
Concourse system, in use for a couple of decades by now and offered by
BookSystems. Evidently the Grosse Pointe Library also uses the same
classification approach; it too, like this one has made me wonder and shake my
head. If you look for Agatha Christy movies, for example, and go to the letter
C, you won’t see anything appropriate. By title, please, always by title.
Looking for a Dorothy Sayers DVD? If you look under S for Sayers you won’t find that worthy lady—but
you might find Strong Poison—and Gaudy Night under G. Sometimes, however, given the interpretation applied
by the librarian using the Concourse system, you actually might discover all of Sayers’ or Ruth Rendell’s DVDs together—because
the largest name, on the cover of the DVD, will be the author’s name, not the
title of the particular story. So it was in Grosse Pointe on some, but by no
means all, such series.
Here at Commerce, Agatha Christy DVDs, clustered powerfully
around Miss Marple and Hercule Poirot, may be found under MAR for the lady and
POI for the gentleman. But, at this stage, my research is far from over. Where,
for instance are Tommy & Tuppence? Are they under TOM or TUP?
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