This Book Is Overdue!: How Librarians and Cybrarians Can Save Us All

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Overview

Buried in info? Cross-eyed over technology? From the bottom of a pile of paper, disks, books, e-books, and scattered thumb drives comes a cry of hope: Make way for the librarians—they can help!

Those who predicted the death of libraries forgot to consider that, in the automated maze of contemporary life, none of us—expert and hopelessly baffled alike—can get along without human help. And not just any help: we need librarians, the only ones who can save us from being buried by the digital age. This Book Is Overdue! is a romp through the ranks of information professionals—from the blunt and obscenely funny bloggers to the quiet, law-abiding librarians gagged by the FBI. These are the pragmatic idealists who fuse the tools of the digital age with their love for the written word and the enduring values of free speech, open access, and scout-badge-quality assistance to anyone in need.

Editorial Reviews

Children's Literature
Librarian power! Swish those biblio capes and twirl those sparkling literary scepters. Librarians have all the answers and they know how to use them. Such is the plight of today's librarian and Johnson provides a unique look into their profession. Not to be confused with grandma's starched (yet tasteful) white bloused, black floor length skirted and bun adorned head, todays librarians emerge in all shapes, sizes, colors, etc. and have one common goal: to find what you are looking for, even if you do not know you are looking for anything. Johnson is quick to point out that librarians today do more than just stamp and shelve books. While those are necessary tasks, do not be surprised to find them sharing a glass of wine or two with popular authors, dressing as storybook characters, or even joining a virtual club experience in Second Life. Any boundaries that have been in place in the past have been pretty much obliterated by the keepers of the latest technology and their imaginations. While not a children's book, this would make for splendid reading during that transitional time that happens somewhere in high school and college when careers are being discussed and paths are becoming more focused. Usually ignored in career fairs, librarians are definitely in the uber cutting edge and a profession not to be shelved in a corner! A must—read for librarians and the company they keep. Libraries and librarians are one of the best kept secrets—it is time to unleash them. Reviewer: Elizabeth Young
From The Critics
This is one of those books, in the vein of Mary Roach's Stiff (about human cadavers), that tackle a big topic by taking readers on a chapter-by-chapter tour of eccentric characters and unlikely locations…In her most absorbing passages, I felt as if I were back in the children's library, scrutinizing a volume of the World Book Encyclopedia, where the entry on "pachyderm" sat near the disquisition on "pachysandra," a kind of ground cover. Johnson's book carries the same kind of associative magic. Rather than taking us on a brisk, orderly march, she lets us ride on the swaying back of an elephant, glimpsing treasures glimmering through the fronds of pachysandra.
—The New York Times

Product Details

  • ISBN-13: 9780061431609
  • Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
  • Publication date: 2/2/2010
  • Pages: 272
  • Sales rank: 598,362
  • Product dimensions: 5.60 (w) x 8.40 (h) x 1.10 (d)

Meet the Author

Marilyn Johnson
Marilyn Johnson
Having made a name for herself penning memorable obituaries for the likes of Katharine Hepburn, Princess Diana, Jackie Onassis, and Johnny Cash for Life and other magazines, Marilyn Johnson takes a fascinating look back at the experience in The Dead Beat: Lost Souls, Lucky Stiffs, and the Perverse Pleasures of Obituaries.

Biography

Marilyn Johnson wrote The Dead Beat: Lost Souls, Lucky Stiffs, and the Perverse Pleasures of Obituaries after writing obituaries for Katharine Hepburn, Princess Diana, Jackie Onassis, Johnny Cash, Bob Hope, and Marlon Brando for Life and other magazines. She has been a staff writer for Life and an editor for Esquire. Her articles and poetry have appeared in many publications. She lives in Briarcliff, New York, and is working on a book about librarians and archivists in the digital age.

Biography courtesy of the author's official web site.

Good To Know

Some fun and fascinating outtakes from our interview with Johnson:

"For several years, I wrote obituaries in advance for ancient or accident-prone celebrities. I seemed to have the magic touch: Even those who looked like skeletons recovered miraculously."

"I used to love reading trashy fiction, but after I worked for Esquire magazine, screening their fiction submissions, I found I'd lost my taste for it. You have to pay me to read bad writing now."

"I adore ratatouille and pesto."

    1. Hometown:
      Briarcliff, New York
    1. Education:
      B.A., University of Pennsylvania; M.A., University of New Hampshire
    2. Website:

Table of Contents

1 The Frontier 1

2 Information Sickness 13

3 On the Ground 31

4 The Blog People 49

5 Big Brother and the Holdout Company 67

6 How to Change the World 87

7 To the Ramparts! 105

8 Follow That Tattooed Librarian 123

9 Wizards of Odd 133

10 Gotham City 171

11 What's Worth Saving? 213

12 The Best Day 245

Epilogue 253

Acknowledgments 263

Notes 267

Select Bibliography 277

Customer Reviews
Average Rating 3.5
( 13 )

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  • Posted April 10, 2010

    more from this reviewer

    Marilyn Johnson's This Book Is Overdue! Or How Librarians and Cybrarians Can Save Us All

    This book is, indeed, overdue! And thank goodness, Marilyn Johnson came out with it. In this current economy, our libraries are the best thing we've got going and anything that brings them to mind, encourages visits, urges investing time in checking them out and researching their history, is of utmost value. All that besides the fact that this is a fascinating read, well written, and I hated to see it end. Fact is, I have got to buy a copy for rereading...got my first read from the library :>) Anyone who loves books, enjoys libraries...this is a must have book! Enjoy it...I sure did! And will again, many times.

    3 out of 3 people found this review helpful.

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  • Posted June 28, 2010

    I Also Recommend:

    I'm grateful to MJ for writing this book

    All who care about our libraries (and those who don't, but should) need to read this book. MJ has broadened my perspective of how libraries should and do function. Frankly, she brought me into the 21st centurey, something I probably needed. Now I go for all the classes on data bases, research, etc. that our nypl has to offer. I got this book at the library but look forward to buying the paperback edition when it comes out, for which the author has promised a much needed index, which, she said at her nypl talk, we can now get on her website of the same name. The chapters on "Wizards of Odd" and "Gotham City" are worth the price of the whole book. MJ enumerates about librarians and their avatars on their "Second Life" website, which I plan to visit soon. There was so much new material in that chapter, I had to read it in two sittings. And I was much impressed with the recording of her visit to the secretive Board of Trustees meeting at the NYPL in the "Gotham City" chapter. She's surely the only non-librarian-trustee who ever breached that security!! WOW!! It is true that her style is a bit breezy and superenthusaistic, so it might leave you a bit breathless, but so what?! I am so glad she wrote this book.

    1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Posted April 11, 2010

    This book is overdone!

    Let's face it: avid readers like books, and so it is natural that they will like libraries, and a book about librarians sounds like a real winner. As someone who also enjoys using the many benefits of technology, I was especially drawn to a book subtitled ,"How Libraries and Librarians Can Save Us All".

    From the title, the cover, and the book jacket narrative, one expects the book to be light in tone, which I enjoy. A light tone, however, doesn't excuse a light approach to organization or balance, and The Book is Overdue fails in that regard.

    The first part of the book starts out well enough. There is good material about how technology is affecting library schools, patron services, and even the nature of libraries themselves. I was intrigued by the virtual libraries in virtual-reality game-playing worlds. And certainly no booklover can fail to cheer at the librarian heroes who defied the FBI in order to protect the reading habits of their patrons.

    After that, the book went rapidly downhill, both in content and organization. Ms. Johnson did a tremendous amount of research and clearly loved every minute of it; then it seems she came back and just spewed it all out without enough attention to organization. The book skips around distractingly and annoyingly. For example, the chapter Gotham City is primarily about the New York Public Library, but in the middle of it there is a long digression describing a specialized boxing library, after which the chapter returns to the Public Library. The boxing library does show another interesting aspect of libraries, but did the discussion of it really belong in the middle of the Public Library presentation?

    The book also needs more balance. In her haste to assure readers that not all librarians wear flat shoes, buns, and go home to live with aging mothers, Ms. Johnson perhaps goes too far in the other direction and seems to glory in portraits as counterculture and bizarre as possible. There could have been more about librarians who are progressive in their professions but a bit more traditional in their personal habits.

    Ms. Johnson obviously loves books and libraries as much as I do; she bubbles with enthusiasm. I just wish she had shared her enthusiasm in a more disciplined way. If you are a bibliophile who enjoys offbeat anecdotal narrative and can tolerate a rather stream-of-consciousness technique, then you will probably like this book a lot.. If, however, you prefer a book from which you learn something and admire a more orderly style, then you should look somewhere else.

    1 out of 2 people found this review helpful.

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  • Posted February 4, 2010

    How Not to Live Like the Collyer Brothers

    The radio gave way to television, which is giving way to the Internet--yet they're all still around. That's because they all still do the same thing, entertain and inform. A medium delivers the message.

    If you're interested in newspapers, magazines, books and have been caught on the Internet, then this book is something to consider. It's not a screed or a polemic, but a breezy account of the proof that the more things change the more they remain the same. We need help. And it's there.

    Ms. Johnson certainly strikes you as someone who cares deeply about all these things, but who also has the light touch to keep anyone from moaning into despair. She's surely one who would help even a shy boy scout usher the elderly across the street--and then have something nice for them to eat on the other side.

    There's more optimism in this book than someone playing with loaded dice.

    John DeMetropolis

    1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Posted June 7, 2011

    Wanted a better handle on modern librarians.

    Another reviewer claimed that all the information was there, it just needed better organization. It highlighted a lot of the new innovations that librarians are using to stay 'up to date'- but the most alarming thing it leaves out is their struggle amid budget slashing and economic downturn. Some of the librarians even hinted at it, like the one in NYPL who knew he would be reshuffled or fired. Instead of investigating that, she goes off in weird tangents about administration vs professional pay and archiving. The author is even shocked to find out librarians write naughty tell all blogs anonomously...but doesnt bother to really get down to the nitty gritty. If you want to know about the realistic world of a librarian, then read those blogs. I felt I didnt learn anything worth while when it comes to the day to day of this profession. Its skippable.

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  • Posted February 8, 2011

    more from this reviewer

    Fun, Honest and a Fast Read

    "This Book is Overdue: How Librarians and Cybrarians Can Save Us All" by Marilyn Johnson is a non-fiction account of the author's research and pontifications of how librarians will guide our culture into technological literacy. The book paints a picture of how the role of librarians is changing with technology. The book is divided into 12 distinct chapters, these don't have to be read in order because each chapter stands on its own. Disclaimer: I am a big fan of public libraries. Public libraries are some of the few public buildings the public actually uses. Whether you are rich or poor, educated or not and no matter to which political party you donated to, you are always welcome at your local library - they are the great equalizer of our society. I loved what this book was trying to do - make librarians relevant at the age of Google. Being in the IT field for the past 20 years (wow, it really has been that long) I can certainly appreciate the "information overload" message and how sifting through mountains of information could be a show stopper (how can you possibly make a decision?) unless you know how to find the relevant information. But we don't even need to go this far - in some states you cannot even file for unemployment benefits unless you do it on-line. Each chapter in the book has a different focus, some chapters were more interesting than the others but they are mostly independent from one another. Ms. Johnson explores different aspects of the job librarians do everyday (archiving, categorizing and helping patrons) with an eye towards the technological modernization of their profession. When it comes to organizational models this book is fun, honest and a fast read. Even though the book is well written, the chapter where Ms. Johnson explores the online librarian games and fantasy world is.well.boring. However, if you trudge through it (or skip it) the book keeps on with its fascinating premise. I wish this book would have been more focused. While every section certainly has its merits, most everyone who will pick up this book knows the relevancy of librarians to us "commoners" and most of the book is about the author's experiences researching.this book. The points in the book would make a great reference point next time you go to the town meeting to argue against slashing the library's budg

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  • Posted April 26, 2010

    more from this reviewer

    Needs a good editor

    I am a huge fan of the library in general so I was looking forward to being impressed with this book. I had to wait several weeks to get it from the library. This book is difficult to read because it needs better editing. The sentences run on continually and conversations begin suddenly. There are pieces of history lost in long paragraphs. I began bored with it after a few chapters. It's interesting to read the progression of libraries into the computer age, how librarians had to learn computer lingo instead of just being a source of information. I would have enjoyed reading more first hand accounts from long-time librarians. The upside of this book is that every community needs a thriving library and every citizen should possess a library card.

    0 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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    Posted April 20, 2010

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    Posted April 19, 2010

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    Posted May 23, 2011

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    Posted September 17, 2010

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    Posted May 22, 2011

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    Posted March 9, 2010

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