Wednesday, September 25, 2019

Whetstone Branch - Columbus Metropolitan Library


The Whetstone Branch Library is my home library—the one my family and I have generally used over our 19 years in Columbus. However, I must say that it was more my family’s home library than mine. I was always more of a book buyer. Indeed I only rarely borrowed a book on those occasions I took my kids to Whetstone or the Main Library downtown. It was actually more likely that I’d go home with a book or two I’d purchased from the Friends of the Library sale shelves. So when I began my library visits in retirement, I discovered that my library card had lapsed, and I had to get a new one on my first library visit last November to the South High Branch.

The Whetstone Branch Library is on N. High St. in Whetstone Park next to the Clintonville Community Center. It was built on this site in 1985 as a merger of the Clintonville and Beechwold library branches.

But before heading to the library for the afternoon, I needed to get lunch. There are lots of small local places to eat in Clintonville, so I picked one I’d been wondering about for some time—Dough Mama Cafe & Bakery on N. High St. a little south of N. Broadway. Resisting all the yummy looking baked goods, I ordered a Grammie’s Sammie turkey meatloaf sandwich with a side of roasted red skin potatoes.



As I noted, the library is in Whetstone Park. The parking lot is behind the library from the street, between it and the tennis courts. To begin I walked around the outside of the library noting especially the metal book sculpture along the side of the library and the view from the grassy park area in front of the library and sheltered from all the traffic on N. High St.


Just inside the library doors are a large meeting room, rest rooms, and the Friends of the Library sale shelves.


I must admit that my continuing library visits have made me more aware of a great many of the areas and services that are part of this, my home library. I knew there was a lot more here than books, but I mostly came in to wait for my kids. So I’d maybe browse the new books shelves, check out the sale books, and then find a chair to sit and read. Mostly I wouldn’t get much farther in than this large open entrance area with the circulation desk and the long peaked atrium extending the length of the library toward N. High St.


Just inside and to the left are shelves for new books and a nice seating area, and to the right is a large children’s area.


Book shelves dominate the entrance to the children’s area. Farther in and to the right there’s a very nice open area with large windows to the south. To the left are computer stations for children and even more book shelves for children’s books. The library as a whole was busier than I’d expected it to be on an early afternoon, so it was fairly difficult to get pictures without identifiable people in them.



There’s also a Homework Help area set aside in this portion of the library. I’m told it can get rather busy after school lets out for the day.


My family would occasionally reserve books on line for pick up from the reserve shelves, so I'd stop by sometimes to pick them up. I’ve always been impressed by how many books were on those shelves at any given time. People in this neighborhood seem to make heavy use of this service.


At the far end of the atrium area is a designated space for teens with computer stations, age appropriate books and media, and some comfortable seating.


To the left of the teen space is a large area with computer stations for adults. And to the right are more computer stations extending toward a reading area with shelves for periodicals and for graphic novels along the wall.


Far to the left and toward High St. is a Quiet Study Room with lots of windows. I must admit, that I’d never known this room was here in all the years of this being my local library.


One of the things I especially like about this branch is that it seems to have more books and to have them as a more prominent presence than in many of the other CML branch libraries—where sometimes the books seem something of an afterthought to all the other services the libraries offer. The stacks for fiction and nonfiction extend along the entire north half of the library from the circulation desk to the Quiet Study Room.



Another of the things I especially like here is all the art on display throughout the building—from stained glass to wall hangings, from paintings to hanging sculpture. The pictures below show just a sampling. I especially liked the small painting of three businesses along N. High St. including Nancy’s Restaurant, something of a Clintonville landmark. The artworks add color and life to the library, something I find a bit lacking in some of the new, architecturally striking CML branches where white walls and glass seem to dominate.




After considerable browsing in the book stacks, I came up with four books to borrow: a couple from the younger readers shelves, including the first book in the How to Be a Supervillain series, and a book in a science fiction series I like (except The Causal Angel turns out to be book #3, so I’ve done a computer reserve this evening for book #2, The Fractal Prince). The nonfiction book, The Bad-Ass Librarians of Timbuktu, has such an irresistible title!



With books in hand, I settled into a comfortable chair near the periodicals racks to read one of my library books from last week. It offered a great view out into part of the park.


I ended up reading for longer than I intended, but I did finish the book. On the way out to turn that book in and check out four new ones, I realized how much I love the sense in this library (and in some others) of having books all around me. I guess it’s like home that way.


Before leaving, I couldn’t resist one more pass by the huge display of new books. And passing a room that had been dark earlier, I noticed that it was now being used for yet another of the many services libraries provide,  a One-on-One Reading Buddies program.

  
What a good day it was for lunch and library!


Wednesday, September 18, 2019

Marion-Franklin Branch - Columbus Metropolitan Library


As soon as I looked up the hours of operation for the Marion-Franklin Branch Library, I realized there was something different here. This branch is open just 40 hours per week—noon until 7 pm Monday-Thursday, and noon until 6 pm Friday & Saturday. So I waited until noon to drive down to the south side of Columbus to get lunch at a funky little diner on Lockbourne Rd. that I have enjoyed a couple of times in the past—the Golden Donuts & Diner.


This small place has a sign inside that indicates it used to be a Jolly Roger Donuts, and the donut counter is front and center just inside the door. There is seating to both sides of the donut display, and a counter with stools extends toward Lockbourne with small booths against the windows. This place has just about the lowest prices I’ve found in a local diner, and I was tempted by a couple of the daily specials posted on the white board above the opening to the kitchen. But I ended up ordering and really enjoying the double cheese burger with bacon. Rather surprisingly, the diner’s music system was playing a selection of Frank Sinatra standards with occasional songs by people like Ella Fitzgerald and Sarah Vaughn.



The library is also on Lockbourne Rd. about a mile south of the diner. It’s in a portion of a larger building that is identified as the Marion-Franklin Community Opportunity Center. I later learned that this building was formerly the Beery Middle School, and the library is in the 4000 square foot space that had been occupied by the school’s media center. It was established as a CML branch in September of 2014 with limited hours as a pilot opportunity to gauge customer usage, and its hours were expanded in 2016 from the initial 29 hours per week to the current schedule. The library backs up to the property of the Marion-Franklin High School.

I didn’t know any of this history when I arrived at the library branch.  When I entered and introduced myself to the librarian at the circulation desk, she referred to the library as an “express branch.” [I'd read about a similar "express branch" in Lakeland, FL, when I was visiting there last month.] I could see almost at a glance that this large room offered many of the same services as the larger CML branches, including computers, wireless internet, a Homework Help Center, and Reading Readiness Programs. But the book selection would be somewhat limited with book shelves mostly along only parts of some of the walls.


To the right from the entrance are shelves of books for older elementary students and teens and the computers for automated check out. Proceeding counter clockwise around the room, there is an area for computer stations and then the Homework Help Center.



Continuing counter clockwise around the room, there are shelves for adult fiction and nonfiction, a bookcase for graphic novels, and low shelves for displaying new books.



Completing the circle back to the entrance, there is an area for younger children with age-appropriate computer stations.


The overall room is very open with various book displays and study tables with chairs arranged throughout the space.


Given the limited book selection, I wasn’t expecting to find much from my Amazon wish list, and indeed, I found just one, Erin Morgenstern’s The Night Circus. But I did pick up another of the How to Be a Supervillain books for young readers by Michael Fry, a book from the New Books shelf by Stan Lee of Marvel Comics fame, and a photo collection of Abandoned Ohio: Ghost Towns, Cemeteries, Schools, and More off one of the book displays.



With books checked out, I settled in to read in one of the comfortable chairs located at the far side of the library straight in from entrance. The blocked off glass doors there provided especially good light for reading. It was a fine way to spend part of a summer afternoon.