This summer the Oshkosh Public Library had a booth at the Farmers' Market. I follow the "Librarian Learns" YouTube channel and stopped to suggest some questions to the host Mike McArthur, which he solicits at the end of each episode. Also at the booth was Sandy Toland, Community Engagement Librarian. She organizes the Library's annual Photo Contest, which I've been helping to judge since my involvement in the Oshkosh Public Museum's "Then and Now" exhibit, but we'd never met. All our communication has been by email.
This year is the Semisesquicentennial of the construction of the building and the Centennial of the Library occupying the entire place, which had been shared with the Museum. As part of the celebration, they asked people about their favorite book, possibly for a YouTube project. I immediately told them mine was William Henry Fox Talbot's Pencil of Nature from 1844, in which he recalls how he invented photography and tries to describe it to a public who hadn't imagined such a thing. However, it's not in the Library's collection, so I probably wasn't a good prospect for their series.
In October, Sandy contacted me about the photo contest, and that reminded me of our conversation this summer. If I purchased a copy of The Pencil of Nature, would the Library add it to their circulating collection? I worked my entire professional life underneath college libraries and pretty much knew the answer, but there might be some options I wasn't aware of. She replied, as expected, that the official policy of the Library is to accept all donations, but it would then be the Library's property with no expectations of what would happen to it. Whether they were added to the collection was subject to the considerations of all collection development decisions. However, there were no copies anywhere in the Northeast Wisconsin Winnefox Library System, which Oshkosh is part of, and it was a significant title. It's the first book ever illustrated with camera photographs.
Onto the internet to see what's available. My preference was the 1969 facsimile edition, which is often found on the used book market (I check periodically to see what my copy's worth). It's also available in really cheap paperbacks since it's been in the public domain for over a century. A copy of the facsimile edition was buy-it-now priced at about half to a third of what several other copies were and half of what mine cost in 1985. It was rated as "very good." The only note was a 3/4 inch tear on the dust jacket.
I ordered it. If it wasn't in good enough condition for a circulating collection, I could mend it as best as possible (I was once in charge of mending at UW-Stout), and place it in the small library at Photo Opp.
When it arrived, except for the tear, it seemed absolutely brand new. It looked like it had never been read. I immediately took care of that. It's really fantastic to get into the head of someone who was learning about photography as we all do, except he was the first one ever to do it and write about it, which he was aware of and delighted by.
Sandy was at the Reference Desk when we met. Although its fate was uncertain, I went ahead with the donation. We spoke about getting involved in public outreach programs and educational workshops and their plans for developing a gallery for local artists. I brought the camera specifically to take her photograph and kept forgetting while we conversed. When she excused herself to help a patron, I took my opportunity. She seemed to stand pretty still, but it looks like quite a few photons made it through her few movements. You can see the Pencil of Nature and another book I donated on the desk.
The first section of this shelving contains the Dewey Decimal Classification 770 - Photography. The catalog lists about 3,800 books so something must be circulating.
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