It’s Friday, and, for “Friday’s Forgotten Books”, a number of us are telling stories about Bill Crider or reviewing his books. I could do either of those. I actually just met Bill a few years ago at Bouchercon in Raleigh. But, we’d been online “friends” for quite a while. It came as a complete surprise when he wrote about Lesa’s Book Critiques for his column in Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine. I had no idea he was going to do that, and my sister’s co-worker saw the column. I’ve always been grateful
Bill has frequently commented on the blog on Thursdays, when readers tell all of us what they’re reading. He’s chimed in, often mentioning older mysteries he’s reading.
And, of course, anyone who follows Bill on Facebook knows about his VBKs, the Very Bad Kitties (now Very Big Kitties) that he rescued.
As a cat lover, I always loved to see these pictures.
I could review some of the Sheriff Dan Rhodes books. When I first read one, I thanked a fellow blogger, Kevin Tipple. Kevin’s from Texas, so he had been a fan for a long time. Somehow, I had missed these books. They’re fun, light-hearted in tone, but always cognizant of the seriousness of crime, especially murder. And, Bill often took on current issues.
That’s what I’m going to share. In November, 2010, Bill agreed to write a post for me. It was in reaction to a discussion on the listserv, DorothyL. Bill defended people who use public libraries.
I will always be grateful, as so many of us are, for Bill’s assistance. He embodies the phrase “a scholar and a gentleman”. But, I’m grateful for his stories as well. Thank you, Bill, for supporting public libraries.
***** Bill Crider, In Defense of Library Patrons, Nov. 4, 2010
There was a big brouhaha on the listserv DorothyL this week when mystery author K.C. Constantine, who once wrote the Mario Balzac mysteries, was quoted as calling “library users literary welfare bums.” And, his own website says, “In Bottom Line Blues he spent an entire chapter attacking public libraries.” Thank heavens, mystery author Bill Crider stepped up to the plate to say he always loved libraries, and had a number of stories about them. I jumped on that, and asked him to tell us a few of those stories.
It’s hard not to like an author whose biographical sketch on his website includes information about his three cats. Crider taught English at the college level for years, but his Ph.D. dissertation was on the hardboiled detective novel. In the mystery field, he’s best known for his Sheriff Dan Rhodes series, described as “The adventures of a sheriff in a small Texas county where there are no serial killers, where a naked man hiding in a dumpster is big news, and where the sheriff still has time to investigate the theft of a set of false teeth.”
So, thank you, Bill, for taking time to tell us a few stories about libraries.
Library Stories
I’ve subscribed to DorothyL, the crime and mystery e-list, for more years than I can remember. Usually I just lurk these days, but when someone mentioned K. C. Constantine’s comment that library users were “literary welfare bums,” I was moved to put in a good word for libraries and library users, mainly because I am one. A library user, that is, not a library. I didn’t think anyone would notice, but someone did. So here I am.
I grew up in a house without many books. In fact, I still have the five or six books I owned as a child, including the remains of the Mother Goose book with which I supposedly met my father at the door every afternoon, demanding that he “‘ead Mama Goose.” But if I didn’t have many books, I had a mother who knew where to get them, and that was the public library. As I mentioned on DL and have mentioned elsewhere, one of my earliest memories of my mother is of her holding me up so I could reach the library shelves and pick out a book. I still remember the book, which was Clementina, the Flying Pig. Sometimes nostalgia tempts me to buy a copy of it, but when I look at the prices it commands, I decide that nostalgia is too expensive these days. At any rate, I loved that book, and I’m sure my mother read it to me many times. Maybe its influence on me has never died, as witness the title of my forthcoming (in 2011) Sheriff Dan Rhodes novel, The Wild Hog Murders. That might seem a pretty slim connection to you, but please remember this story when you seen the cover for the book. I’ll put it on my blog soon.
But I digress. I was going to tell some library stories. The two libraries in Mexia, Texas, became like second homes to me as I was growing up. There were two because the original library was replaced by the Gibbs Memorial Library, a fine air-conditioned building that wasn’t exactly structurally sound and that has now been replaced by a third library, an even finer one with the same name. The first library is still there, by the way, but it’s now a part of the Christ Episcopal Church complex. And sure enough, I’ve digressed again. I have a tendency to do that. I’d better stop.
Here’s a library story for you. When I was in college, a friend of mine and I were home for some holiday or other. We began talking about Dr. Seuss and how much we’d liked certain of his books when we were kids, McElligot’s Pool being a particular favorite. We decided we had to read the book again, so we were off the Gibbs Memorial Library. The book was right where it had always been, and we sat down to read it. Mind you, we were in the room with the children’s books, and the tables and chairs weren’t built for two guys of our size. We didn’t care. We sat in the little-bitty chairs, our knees sticking out above the table top and started reading. Pretty soon we were having a wonderful time. Maybe we even did a little reading aloud: “Oh, the sea is so full of a number of fish, . . .” Pretty soon after that the librarian came in. We must have been quite a sight, and we’d forgotten about being quiet. Even though there was nobody else in the room, we got shushed. We were also asked to leave the children’s room because we might break the chairs. I had my doubts. Those were study chairs, solid wood. But we went quietly. It’s the only time I was ever chastised in a library.
Or maybe not. There was the time when I was a bit younger and had discovered the wonders of photography magazines. Those were in the periodicals room, and I believe the library had subscriptions to only one of them, maybe Modern Photography. Memory grows dim. At any rate, the attraction of the magazine (at least to me) wasn’t the amazing photography hints (shoot at 1/32 of a second at f/2.4) as the occasional “art studies.” I didn’t know much about art, but I knew what I liked. So did the librarian, who wandered through one day and happened to notice my choice in “reading” material. She obviously thought I should try something else, though she didn’t take the magazine away from me. Instead she suggested that I try a different one, maybe Boy’s Life. I put down the photography magazine and picked up Boy’s Life, which I glanced through until she left the room. Then it was back to my studies.
Yes, I was the only one in the room. I often was, and for years I’d spend hours there reading magazines like The New Yorker and The Atlantic, which I suspected that no one else in town cared about. I loved Colliers and The Saturday Evening Post and Life. Not to mention Mechanix Illustrated, where I discovered the writing of Tom McCahill, whose prose I greatly admired. He coined the phrase “zero to sixty” in his road tests, but that was the least of it. If you like wild metaphors, you can’t go wrong with Tom McCahill. I wanted to be Tom McCahill when I grew up. Didn’t make it, though.
When I was in graduate school, I was finally able to get a “stack permit” to enter the vast holdings of the main library at The University of Texas at Austin. What a great time I had there, when instead of doing research on the papers that were due in my classes, I could pore over the bound back issues of The New York Times Book Review. I read every single one of Anthony Boucher’s “Criminals at Large” columns with a pen in one hand and a note pad beside me. I wrote down the titles of practically everything he recommended. The paperback originals, I bought in used-book stores. The hardcovers, I checked out of the library, which had a wonderful and up-to-date collection. Those were the days.
The librarian whose name you see in the article was an older woman with hair that had once been red but was at that time mostly gray. Mrs. Armstrong. I thought she was wonderful. I still do.
On behalf of all librarians, Bill, and all of us who grew up using, and loving public libraries, Constantine’s “literary welfare bums,” thank you.
What a coincidence! I am right this minute in the middle of reading Crider's
"Wild Hog Murders", from the library, of course……and I did wonder about the cover art.
Such a nice piece. And what an insult to us less fortunate readers who could not possibly purchase all the books we love to read.
This is wonderful. Thank you so much for sharing it, Lesa.
I know, Diane. I was insulted then, and so pleased when Bill spoke up for library users. That's why I asked him to tell those library stories. That's funny. Of all books for you to be reading now!
Thank you, Beth! Wasn't it a wonderful piece?
Terrific! thanks so much for sharing.
You're welcome, Terrie.
Lesa, I am thrilled that you shared this with us. I have been thinking and 🙏🏻 for Bill and his family (including his fur babies)
I started going to the library when I was a child and I am now 77 and still using the library. Planning on using it still I am no longer here. I am so thankful for the library and the pleasure it has brought me. I just like going there. It was always peaceful. Not that way now. Don't know what happened. I feel you have helped many through years to fall in love with the library.
I brought my children up using the library. Then they took their children.
Charlotte, It means so much when parents take their children to the library. I've had stories here, like Bill's, of authors whose parents took them to the library. It's something they don't forget, and, if we're lucky, it stays with them for life.
Lesa, I agree with Charlotte. My earliest memories was walking to our local library as a child ( I am now 76) loving the books and waiting till I was of allowed age to graduate into the adult main library. I still use our marvelous library where I am living now and they do wonderful things for all age groups and certainly provide many services for those who could not afford it otherwise. That does not mean that I have not also not bought hundreds of books for personal use and as gifts for friends and grandchildren at our local bookstores through the years. I can't imagine a world without libraries & a storehouse for preservation of history. Guess he must be our "Scrooge"of the year!!
Another lifelong library person her too.
We always went to our very small town – at the time – library. I had read all the books in the children's section before I went to school. Now that library has grown and I might not be able to do that now. I moved away and love out small-town library here too. It is a gathering place and has many events for ages 1-month to 90+. We all love our library.+
I loved Bill's library story. My mother took me when I was a kid and I have loved the library ever since. In college I took out so many books that the librarian thanked me for increasing their circulation totals. I took out a lot of books for papers, and luckily they had plenty of the older books downstairs and available.
Thank you, Pat & Gram & Jeff. I'm so glad you're all library lovers. (I knew you were from previous posts.) But, it's so wonderful to hear the stories, and hear how much you appreciate your local libraries. Thank you for speaking up for them.
And, Jeff? Thanks for continuing to try to post. I know how frustrating it must be to type comments, and then see them disappear.
From now on I will try and use the phone until Blogger gets its act together.