A few months ago, Minneapolis writer Kate DiCamillo shared a photo on her Facebook page. It was of a library card — not the kind used to check out books, but the kind that used to be kept inside a manila pocket in the front of every library book.
The title of the book was typed at the top, and if you wanted to bring the book home you wrote your name on the card and handed it to a librarian. The librarian filed it in a long wooden box and then stamped a date on another card, which she slid into the manila pocket. That was your reminder of when to bring the book back.
This is how Kate DiCamillo, and all of us, used to do it back in the day.
So imagine the time traveling inspired when a librarian from DiCamillo's old grade school came to one of her readings with a library card in hand. It was for "Mary Poppins Opens the Door," by P.L. Travers, and there, printed neatly in pencil on the second line, was the name Kate DiCamillo. She had borrowed that book back in the 1970s, and now here was the card, given back to her, a little bit of her own history.
"Thank you, Clermont Elementary Library," DiCamillo wrote on Facebook. "You opened doors for me."
It is impossible to look at that card without a deep pang of loss. While Kate DiCamillo was haunting libraries down in Florida, I was up in Duluth, haunting libraries of my own: Endion Elementary School, Woodland Junior High, the Duluth Public Library.
It wasn't just the books that I loved (though I loved those deeply), but everything: the fussy accoutrements — the little stamps with the inky rollers that changed the date, digit by digit. The wooden magazine rack, where you could look at all those magazines you didn't get at home. The tiny-type Readers' Guide to Periodical Literature, where, once you cracked the code, you could find any article you wanted, by author, topic, or title.
Everything about a library opened doors, let in light, told you more than you had ever expected to know.