I was a prolific reader as a kid. Homeschooled, single mom who worked, so I would spend sometimes 6 or 7 hours a day at the library while she was at work. Once I went through the entire kids section, the librarian caught me in the adult section and I thought I'd be in trouble. Instead she showed me this collection of fairy tales that were dark and when my mom came to pick me up, she explained I'd been through everything and asked my mom to sign consent for an adult library card. Which she did, because my mom rocks. Lol. Only book she wouldn't let me read was the color purple when I was 10. Had to wait a bit for that. Lol.
I don't get to read as much as I used to. My eyes are terrible now, so I do a lot of audiobooks while I'm driving or cleaning, cooking. I'm a big fan of urban fantasy, love Jim Butcher. But my favorite book is The Talisman by Stephen King and Peter Straub. Favorite series is the Dark Tower series by King.
It's a book that was made into a movie with Whoopie Goldberg. Absolutely amazing book, and one of the few examples of a movie truly holding up in my opinion. Worth watching.
Well, there was this one time that I wanted a book that was in the restricted section, and I didn't have a teacher's note allowing me to go in there, so I just took my invisibility cloak one night and snuck in anyway. The librarian suspected nothing.
I wasn't even looking for a book. I had slipped into the Webway by complete accident, and then this clown god shows up and makes jokes about library cards, and the walls just keep saying "bazinga". He eventually let us in but by the Emperor that was creepy.
I went to my local, very-small-southern-Bible-Belt-Town library asking for a copy of Children of Lucifer: The Origins of Modern Religious Satanism, which is a dense, scholarly book (extensively researched!, lots of end notes!, published by the Oxford University Press!), and not even remotely sensationalist. I put in a request for an interlibrary loan, because they didn't have a copy in the system that my library is part of; I assumed that it would need to come from a university.
Not unexpectedly, I never received a call, email, text, or anything at all following up on my request. I strongly suspect that they "lost" it.
The book is considerably less expensive now; I think the exchange rate is why it was previously so expensive.
Never. I haven’t seen any snide looks or side eyes, either, and if I can’t find something then the ones I’ve seen (in both red and blue states) have been as helpful as can be, trying to find things in library networks or in other formats (ex: Libby).