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Contents FLASH theme: libraries Unsolicited Book Reviews Jacob Shelton 3 SERIALS POETRY Serengeti Dust #6 Sean Williams 13 Shelved Fi Smith 27 VISUAL ART Strange Wistfulness Lionel Ntasano 4 Cover Artwork El Don & Sydney Oliver A Lunch at “The Knife and Fork Inn” Steve Luria Ablon 27 Libraries Sylvia Sime 4 Fish Sophia Greif 17 Living Libraries Katleho Kano Shoro 28 Research Has Its Place Brian Robertson 5 Untitled; Less; Red Bart 18 GARBAGE DELIGHT The Feast of St Jerome and St Valentine Salome M. 6 FEATURES SHORT FICTION Public Libraries: Innately Subversive Institutions Salome M. 20 From Aleph to Tav Sean Williams 7 4000 Holes #4 Gorilla in the Roses Salome M. 32 Call for Submissions 36 “The fight for libraries goes underground” - El Don Overheard and seen in Woodbridge Library, Suffolk. October 2013 - February 2014 Rebecca May Johnson 29 2 Editor’s Note The case on how libraries gave us power is made in numerous ways throughout the issue. Dissent and disruption can be found under Shelton, J in the Flash section and the latest edition of 4000 Holes, shelved in Garbage Delight. For a dark account of the value in careful research and the dangers of censorship, look up Robertson, B. A guide on casual browsing and the way to finding sunken treasures can be located under Sime, S. The library is open. Membership is free. Everyone is welcome. The quote on our cover says it all. Unfortunately it also comes from a time in which the existence of public libraries with addresses accessible to all was taken as granted. That time is not now and without this assumption to validate the point, it becomes merely a relic. As the wisdom of the scientific genius grows obsolete in the devastation of the public libraries network, the words of Pastor Martin Niemoller begin to echo. What has been dosed out as a matter of local government business and a necessity of financial management is in fact another frontier in the global culture war against a neo-liberal ideology committed to fortifying the elite at the expense of everyone outside it. As much as books, information, education and creativity, public libraries are about freedom. The prevailing direction of the elite – through invasive legislation, aggressive copyright suits, nefarious data collection, media conglomeration and commercialisation of public space – is to take away this freedom in the interests of capital. Products don’t need rights, though interestingly, according to the US Supreme Court, corporations do. So far they’ve been winning. But those who turn their back on knowledge can’t adapt. Those who disregard culture can’t create. Those who build barriers have to guard them. And those blinded by their own interests can’t see the other side, however great in number, however angry, however ready to react. The concept of the tipping point is easily understood by anyone with a mind open to it. Our featured article on the subversive influence of public libraries explores this further. To start making a difference is simple. Look up your local library and visit it. If you aren’t a member already, join. If you have children, join them too. If you have any overdue loans at home, take them back. If you have fines, pay what you can. More people reading are more powerful than the money. Cut out and take along the coupon below. Look at the shelves, find something to borrow. Try and find the youngest and oldest people there. Ask the people working there what they like to read. 3 Listen to the silence. Or the singing. Or the staff gossiping. Stand in solidarity with those who believe culture and learning should be for everyone and that a space to find them which is free and open to all in a community is a universal right of access. Then make a habit of it. Maybe you’ll learn something new. Maybe you’ll meet someone new. Maybe you’ll fall in love with them (this happens in libraries more than you might imagine). Maybe you’ll want to do more, like sign a petition, or join a protest or write letters to your political representative. Maybe you don’t believe us. But take Albert’s word for it. Flash Theme: Libraries Unsolicited Book Reviews by Jacob Shelton I tried to open my own library after being kicked out of the old one for writing unsolicited book reviews and nestling them within the pages and shelves of the non-descript municipal building. The reviews weren’t inflammatory or anything, they were simply short pieces that said things like, “Not great.” Or, “I’m a bit tired of Stephen King, aren’t you?” Anyway, I couldn’t get funding for the new library so I invested in a collection of inexpensive disguises. About the Author My name is Jacob Shelton and I'm a writer living in Los Angeles, California. My work has been featured in Nat. Brut, Love & Other Strangers, and Kill Pretty Magazine. I've also published a collection of short stories about found photographs. So there. Strange Wistfulness by Lionel Ntasano Kinshasa – 1974 All I recall is that the pouring rain fell all night and all day, and that when I asked my father whether heaven was crying, he couldn’t bring himself to respond. An outbreak of a terrifying and mysterious hemorrhagic fever had taken my sister away. Two years later Zelda’s absence remained in the air around us, a blaring quietude that I had not yet learned to suppress with words. We lived in a modest house in the district of Gombe, which housed most of the European population of Kinshasa, and the Congolese elite, a stone throw from the government building. I inherited Zelda’s room; all her belongings were still in their original place since she had last used them, a legacy from her short life that specialized in rare collection of thread-bound second hand books from the Alliance Franco- Belge of Kinshasa – An enthralling souk, which my father hoped would keep her alive through me. It looked neglected, past its prime, cluttered up with thoughts left just as they were on the day they were captured. There was something bewitching about the words it still held – the potential world it represented; a legacy beyond time. In any event, I spent my childhood among this literary opuscule, making inconspicuous friends concealed in pages from book characters that had common experiences; we shared detentions and adventures, laughs and loss. We would also have our quarrels where we would even hate each other, but in the end, we always stuck by each other. Routinely, after completing my nocturnal ablutions, I learned to fall asleep talking to Zelda in the darkness of her bedroom, telling her about the things I had been learning at school, being taught all sorts of things except religion. I would admit to her that I failed to get from the teachers what they could have given me without any effort on their part, and yet I kept on picking up things here and there from my surroundings – which were mainly knowledge of self. I would keep her up-to-date about the daily jamborees happening in the new Congo, we were now calling it Zaïre. Most times my father would secretly eavesdrop to my aberrant behavior, wailing in silence. 4 About the Author Lionel was born in the third smallest county in Africa, also, one of the most unknown countries in the world Burundi. He has lived, traveled, and studied all over the globe, trying new things (Here), enjoying transient relationships (There), and safekeeping values from (Everywhere) - He is secretly a Beatles fan to say the least, a musician at heart, culinary chef by profession, but, George Orwell tapped into his unconscious mind liberating a part of him through literature. He has made it my lifetime goal to share this liberating abstract ideology by writing. His first attempt was by publishing a novel titled, 'Greener On The Other Side'. Visit his personal website: lionelntasano.wordpress.com Libraries by Sylvia Sime There are seven steps leading to the labyrinth. Once in front of its entrance, the extent of the excitement at entering is matched only by the evidence ahead, to the endless imagination, of everlasting education and eventual enlightenment. Across the threshold of the mouth and on the path of the first circuit, each explorer is enveloped by the walls, tall as trees and tinder-dry; embedded with wood-derived hallucinogens and addictive psycho-actives. The path ahead is compulsive, calling to the traveller with its circularity, simple and sincere; the smell one of adventure, both of the distant past and memories of the safety of the swaddled soul, and the mysterious future, smoky and dense like religious incense sanctifying the space in which it swirls. The sounds of fellow travellers are akin to those of lazy lovers lamenting their earthly limits, and are muted by the thuds emanating from what is the first, and, on the return journey, last turn of the path; hence the natural position of the dispensary where the lending and loaning takes place. The gate-keepers of the labyrinth are pharmacists of its knowledge; all self-taught and self-indulged; all in altered states of consciousness, all generous with their wisdom and none refusing any traveller’s personally-penned prescription thereby promoting access to ever-expanding perceptions. Past the first turn, the walls reek of the reminiscence of history, the blocks of wood lining this part of the path referencing their ingredients not with imagination, but with laundered facts, the travellers here temporary and transient, checking and clarifying. Curving to the second turn, the walls wear an air of disciplined argument, an authority of authority; the path trammelled by the tools of trade of the tired student; worn-in seats and uneven desks, the view ahead vandalised by plastic bottles of contrived chemicals and plastic bags of ingested irritants. The walls turn to glass as the third turn is approached; the path to the fourth turn requiring calm navigation through a space of silent study; pens clicking, papers rustling and strictly no eye contact. Brains are at work and using the walls of black and white boards, on the way forward to the fifth curve, soundproofing the tones of the static traveller teaching the temporary tutees. The path leading from the fifth to the sixth bend should be skipped along; the rest and relaxation here experienced as escapism and the travellers motivated by their sensory desires; the ambience blissful before the cogitating, contemplating and considering demanded at the sixth turn of the long meander; the sound here of disparate facts being reassembled as knowledge, intrinsically individual now, but the whiff still distinctly of the mundane. The truly determined seekers find their way to the seventh swerve where the esoteric wooden boxes decorating the walls are labelled, in a language weaved throughout the labyrinth’s lanes, with promises of enlightenment, and displayed in its wholeness here, the stillpoint of the centripetal traveller intending true transformation of consciousness. The temple that is the library is found within. About the Author Sylvia is a middle-aged sort who enjoys writing random ramblings and wordsmithery. 5 Research Has Its Place by Brian Robertson Art Deco and high ceilings, still the perfect template in my opinion. We used to be taken regular as clockwork when we were little – the weekly visit. It just seemed part of life. I keep returning, but it’s only me now. “Geordie’s awa’ ” I tell them, “and he’ll no’ be comin’ back.” Geordie always had advice and guidance for me. There’s only two years between us. An insignificant gap after a lifetime but back then…… “Over there, those shelves, you’ll learn something.” “He’s a good author.” I remember the feeling of space on our visits. The Reading Room. Its 4 long tables and 40 chairs with semicircular backs and arms. Blond wood in perfect symmetry and panoramic views from those tall windows to the city across the firth. We studied in that Reading Room – unusual specimens amongst the newspapers. Was the smell that of floor polish or the tang of the books that would get Geordie better marks (for he always did)? The large entrance hall – luxuriously redundant then, but now with a new use as parking for wheelchairs of worldly possessions or shopping trollies bearing suitcase and sleeping bag. Warmth is still sought and the food for the mind is still free. We each, in our own way, tried to branch out. Staying close to Mum and Dad seemed safest though. They went eventually, leaving half of a small fortune to each of us. It was me and Geordie together in the house and I became incompetent, unthinking, uncaring and generally useless. Or so I was told. We never travelled abroad but I know what other places are like. People in seaside towns need real food all the year round, not just a book for the beach.Geordie and I would explore their sources – cool in high summer with lazy ceiling fans. In new towns, in old towns, near bus stations, out in the schemes. We visited and compared. Shelf stocks suprisingly eclectic. A gem might be claimed after a solo trip, but only if it would withstand confirmation by Geordie. Rare then, impossible now. And the “advice” persisted. “You couldn’t choose a decent book to save yourself.” “Her stuff is junk. It’ll rot your brain.” Grazing the fiction shelves eventually led to the crystallisation of an idea. Then it was to the towering stacks in the Central to establish methodology. I did my research without computers. Fingerprints remain but nothing digital. Geordie went to the doctor’s a lot. Everything was wrong – and nothing. Is it any surprise that someone of 78 should die of natural causes, old age even? There wasn’t a post mortem. My judicious pharmaceutical engineering had ensured a slow decline. Now that I’m free, with finances doubled, I’ve discovered other people in the world and I’d like my own library. Books, but bricks and mortar too. A touch of the Art Deco wouldn’t be out of place. There will be a travel section. I can confirm that. About the Author In another existence, I taught Physics and children for nearly 40 years. I have spent much of my leisure time kicking, striking and bouncing balls but I attended creative writing evening classes a few years ago. I have recently returned with fresh energy and this has been my first attempt to seek publication. I live in Edinburgh. The Feast of St Jerome and St Valentine by Salome M. Some scientists, experts in toxicology and bacteriology, tested the most popular library books for loan and found significant traces of herpes and cocaine. You might imagine they’d have had better things to do. Most library workers could guessed the same if asked. The first time, a guy – middle aged, balding, came in with his children – asked to borrow a pen and scrap paper. When he brought them back, I said he could keep the paper but he slipped it to me anyway. Unfolding it after he’d left, he’d written a home phone number and the caveat ‘Don’t call after 6pm’. It was more romantic the time an elderly Pashtun asked for help using a computer. I sat down with him and logged on while he told me how much I looked like his Persian wife. 6 She was a higher caste to him and their families hadn’t approved. They had still eloped but this was many years ago and I’m not sure what happened to her. He didn’t want a computer lesson after telling his story and he left, though later he offered me 300 rupees towards my own marriage. The exchange rate into sterling as it was, the gesture was symbolic, though I wasn’t engaged anyway and after I while I broke up with my boyfriend. It took some time before the man stopped harassing him over what he’d done to break it up, imploring him to make it right. There was another librarian who was pursued by a guy who always came at the same time and the same computer. His foundation was always smeared in California Tan on his collar. People sad he used to be a nurse at the local psychiatric hospital before he got caught in bed with a patient. His approach was based on negative psychology, the kind popular with the teenage boys, amusing themselves and learning nothing from their practice of hiding texts from the sex advice section in GCSE revision guides. It was not successful. I hope he didn’t learn it at the hospital. Sometimes things worked out better. The woman who used to come half naked, drunk and wild eyed, trying to return soggy books other people had thrown out. She got together with the guy who came to sleep in the warmth of a corner and paper bag fumes, who sometimes tried to unwrap his bandages and show you his wounds. There were others too, who shyly nurtured their open secret. Walking to work together then using separate entrances, meeting indoors, as if for the first time that day. Co-ordinating lunch breaks on the rota. Finding reasons to hang around to leave at the same time and take the train together. Everyone could feel it when they’d had an argument and some even tried to give advice, but what they had remained unspoken and pure from any notion of public property. Sooner or later they always made up. On Valentine’s Day, one of the staff put on a speed dating event and a quiz. The ratio in the audience was 9:1 but they all had a good time anyway. Another librarian suggested we should hold library matchmaking based on what people’s favourite book was. He always had very fine ideas. He made a drawing of me once, in a staff meeting. I had my back to him so I didn’t see. About the Author Salome M. is a collector of thoughts and times, mostly working between the postindustrial North West of England, the neighbourhoods of Bohemia found between 1840 and 1939 and the Promethean Immateria. She rarely travels without her companion Cavale, a five toed crow with a cowboy mouth. Short Fiction From Aleph to Tav by Sean Williams I Captain Areadne was the first to see Aleph. Like many, he had seen it before through telescopes back on Earth; but to see it this close, with only glass and a few thousand feet of space to separate them, was something else entirely. When Aleph was first tracked by the Near-Earth Object Program it was believed to be an unidentified comet, one with an extremely lengthy orbit of our Sun. To much amazement and awe, the high-resolution images captured by numerous space telescopes, however, catapulted intrigue into the object far beyond the niche of astronomical research, and instead positioned Aleph as the single most important discovery in human history. For the images, first thought to be erroneous or to have been surreptitiously tampered with, appeared to show what can only be described as a an object pyramidal in shape, with straight edges and a perfect geometry that intimates sentient creation. Aleph was indeed not a comet, but a gigantic white four-sided pyramid, cutting through the heavens, with a flaring tail of burning blue ice. Predictably, all major space powers accused each other of the object’s creation, suggesting Aleph to be a weapon of mass destruction or an instrument of espionage, whilst certain 7 nations were simply left to longingly reminisce the days when they too would have been suspected. However, an investigation conducted by the apolitical international space exploration organisation, The Alliance, which assiduously monitors activity such as rogue launches and unauthorised synthesising of rocket fuel, found no evidence to support any human involvement. In fitting with a discovery of this magnitude an expedition to intercept Aleph’s orbit was planned. Humans regularly landed upon and mined comets and asteroids, so the technological requirements of such a mission were not wanting. It was in fact the search for astronauts with such hardened and adaptable mental faculties that would prove the most time-consuming aspect of the mission’s preparation. The question of how one can determine whether a person is mentally-equipped to deal with the potentiality of sights and experiences of which no person has previously encountered has no obvious answer. In lieu of such a test, The Alliance simply scoured its ranks for astronauts who had survived certain lifethreatening situations that were so anomalous and unique that preparation for such a scenario was beyond the horizon of any mission planner. Having assembled a shortlist of these intuitive survivors, the agency subjected them to an intensive and rigorous screening programme at their headquarters in Geneva. Over the course of two weeks the seasoned astronauts underwent challenges both physical and mental, the latter of which proving the faltering point of many. The four astronauts ranked highest at the end of this period learned, as they had expected, despite the pretence toward confidentiality on the part of the recruiters, that they were to form the expedition to make contact with Aleph. Captain Areadne took a moment to clear his mind of the minutiae of the mission. He let everything, from coordinates and velocities to the pangs of hunger he’d been feeling since his measly breakfast, simply evaporate into the dark vacuum of space surrounding his ship. For the vista before him was something of which he had been dreaming his entire career; something to which he must devote his entire attention. The view through the panoramic window of Viridian IV’s bridge was so beautiful and mysterious that to communicate its imprint upon one’s perceptions would be impossible. Knowing this, the captain sought to preserve the impression, letting it flood his cortex, eroding and sculpting his synapses; such that when the trivialities of everyday thought returned, they would merely trickle through the canyon left by what he was feeling right now. To the left was Mars, blood red, half in light, half in shadow; to the right was endless nothingness; and in the centre, growing larger every second was Aleph – the white pyramid on a bed of blue fire. II “Oh my God. This is incredible”. The ship’s pilot and navigator, Irfana, was remarking upon the scale of Aleph, as she guided Viridian IV ever nearer toward its destination. The panoramic window of the bridge was now saturated by the vast structure, which shone a glorious white in the undiluted glare of the sun. The edges looked like they could slice through planets and the tip perforate stars. And the surface, pure, unblemished, was a perfect continuation of some otherworldly material. Which made the thin black fissure that presently appeared close to the base of the vast slope all the more noticeable. “Are you seeing this?”, asked van Maanen, the ship’s engineer, refusing to believe his eyes. “I think it’s an opening”, replied Juette, The Alliance’s foremost AI technician. “I knew it. I fucking knew it,” she continued, elated. “It is a fucking spaceship. Oh, man. This is it. This is really it.” “What shall I do, sir?” Irfana asked Areadne, with the fissure now expanding outwards, forming a small triangular opening, inverse with respect to the side of the pyramid. “Well, we’ve come this far,” he replied calmly. “Let’s see if anyone is home.” III The four explorers climbed from the hull of the Viridian onto the floor of a rather dank and disappointingly-bland hangar. Concrete from floor to ceiling, lit by bawdy fluorescent tubes, and undercut by the metallic grinding of a set of extractor fans in one corner. There was even a puddle accumulating in the middle of the floor, the rusty bucket placed to catch the leak having long since overflowed. The air was breathable, fit for human consumption, but betrayed an odour of decay and stagnation, of overpowering stillness. “This way please!” A chipper voice bellowed from behind them. Sheer piercing terror strangled their minds. Encountering something so familiar as a human voice on this utterly alien object was, strangely, more difficult to process that would have been a snarling many-tentacled bestial nightmare. And, thus, the astronauts were forced into a split-second decision. Either fall down and embrace the luxury of insanity or turn around to greet the source, smothering their rational mind like a hunted parent would their crying child. “This way please!” In a demonstration of the success of The Alliance’s selection process, the group turned around. Peering through a dim doorway was a skinny pale man with long thinning grey hair, dressed in a brown shirt and green corduroy trousers. “I’ll answer all your questions in due time. But first, I must give you the tour! Follow me.” 8 IV “Here on the first floor we have the ‘Origins’ section.” Miles of bookcases stretched beneath an array of candelabras, which gently lit the dusty chamber. The floor was carpeted and soft underfoot, and every now and then the odd desk or armchair punctuated the undulating stream of shelves. A quick glance at the nearest bookshelf betrayed evidence of unskilled and rushed bindings: Pages were coming loose, the covers were saturated with moisture, and the bulky tomes, all equal in size, were marked on their spines in scrawled ink, with titles such as ‘From Hydrogen, Everything. vol. III’ and ‘The Initial State: A Labour of Love’. “Oh, but I am sorry. Where are my manners?” The pale corduroy man chuckled. “You’re always getting ahead of yourself, he would tell me!” He paused, appeared to be elsewhere, cleared his throat, then continued. “My name is Belltop. And this is my library. And I’m very, very pleased to meet you all.” Areadne stared into the librarian’s bloodshot eyes, supernovae in miniature. “Where are you from?” he managed to muster. “Ah, ah, ah!” Belltop wagged his right index finger. “What did I say about questions? Onto the next floor!” V And on they rose through the floors. Large painted signs hanging from the dark wooden ceilings demarcated each section; sections such as ‘The Formation of Earth’, ‘Abiogenesis’, ‘From Water to Land’. Each floor identical in decor to the last. Flickering candelabras casting halos of light over the mouldy, disintegrating bookshelves. The one time Juette stopped to thumb through one of the decaying volumes, a book entitled ‘A History of the Development of the Eye, vol. XIX’, Belltop pounced upon her, shouting, “They’ll be plenty of time for reading much later, young lady!” After traversing perhaps twenty, maybe thirty floors, the group came to one... “...which contains the individual history of every single human being that has ever lived,” Belltop announced. “From kings and queens to paupers and slaves. Whether you lived for a second or lived for an age, your story is collected here. “And, yes, I know you’re all wondering the same thing – How did I decide who was the first human? How did I decide whose would be the first story to be collected here?” Belltop said, smiling. “Well, let me say this: When matters of categorisation are concerned, we librarians are often at the whim of our own discretion. “Oh, but Belltop, were there not a set of defining human characteristics present in a particular new generation that were absent in the last?” he asked himself, mockingly. “I thought I said no questions!” he practically growled in answer. However, this was not, as Belltop had reasoned, what the astronauts were wondering. They were, of course, desperate to ascertain the location of their stories. How detailed were the 9 accounts? Were there innermost thoughts committed to the page? And what of their future? Could they learn of the circumstances of their deaths, and upon which take measures to counteract such prophecy? Breaking their cogitations, “Next floor!” barked the librarian. VI The floors were becoming increasingly confined as they travelled upwards toward the pyramid’s pinnacle. And with each reduction in physical proportions came an increase in both the esotericism of the collection and the disconcertedness of their tour guide’s speech. There were sections labelled ‘The Weight of the Soul’, ‘Love Songs in Binary’, ‘Momma’s Secret Pi Recipes (nom, nom, numen)’, with books titled ‘Howdy, Tetragrammaton!’, ‘The Thingness of the Thinginess of Things’, ‘Strange Loops Around the Garden: A novel’. Belltop would stand before bizarre works of art, paintings beyond the abstract, of a geometry and depth beyond human comprehension, and say things like, “Of course, as you can see, his output became, well, sloppy. He has indeed lost his way” and “There was nothing more for me to do. I had to take drastic action!” Perhaps, the group reasoned, Belltop had become unhinged from the countless years of solitude it must have taken to categorise and order this colossal collection. Or perhaps, by necessity, Belltop was mad to begin with. The floor at which they arrived presently was decidedly different from those which preceded it. It had the dimensions of a cube, and was of such a size that it almost required Belltop to hunch over to avoid contact with the ceiling. The floor, having shed the carpet of those previous, was of a cold reflective metal, and the walls were of an unbroken white, similar in appearance to the exterior of the ship. Opposite them, a blot on the unbroken white, was a wooden door, red paint peeling from its surface, with a small brass handle, itself flecked with paint and rust. From the centre of the ceiling and extending toward the floor was a dumbwaiter, and appending this a conveyer belt, which coursed toward a vent next to the door through which they had just entered. “This room is the interface”, Belltop whispered. “You must stay very quiet. I don’t want him to know you’re here yet.” He continued, “It is here where I receive and categorise his latest work, before sending it down to be shelved. Only some time ago, he stopped sending me things. I should have known things were deteriorating at the first sign of poetry, but I thought... Well, I thought he would just grow out of it. I thought it was just a phase...” He trailed off. Again, looking as if his mind was elsewhere, before righting himself and re-establishing eye contact with the astronauts. “Over here is the last thing he sent down.” Belltop motioned toward a rickety metal shelving trolley, upon which was a single leaf of parchment. “Go ahead, read it.” Juette, closest to the trolley, picked up the page, and read aloud, “I’m finished.” “Shh, shh, shh! He’s just upstairs. You’ll startle him.” “Startle who, exactly?” requested Areadne. “It doesn’t matter who he is,” retorted Belltop. “The only thing that matters is that he most certainly isn’t finished. He isn’t anywhere near to being finished, in fact.” Belltop sighed. “Look, I came here for your help. I need your assistance to encourage him to return to his work. He won’t listen to me anymore. I am at a loss as to what to do, and... Well, do you think you can help?” “We need to know what we’re dealing with here, sir”, replied van Maanen. “You said you will answer all our questions. At the beginning. You said you would do so after the tour,” Irfana pleaded. “I say a lot of things,” Belltop said as he looked toward his feet, his manic disposition fading away to one of tiredness. “Well what do you say to this?” began Areadne. “Why should we help? Of what consequence is it to us?” “Ha! What consequence?!” Belltop emitted an abrasive cackle. “Before I answer, may I say what a fantastic job The Alliance has done in selecting the four of you. You have all handled this situation extremely well. So calm and...” “You know of The Alliance?” Juette interrupted. 10 “Oh, but of course! For I too am their employee.” “But this is preposterous! The Alliance know of you?” asked Areadne. “Not exactly. Not your Alliance, anyhow. I’m not sure how to explain it – it’s all very confusing.” “I think you should try”, the captain firmly replied. “The goal of The Alliance,” began Belltop, seemingly ignoring Areadne’s command, “whether or not explicitly stated, is the survival of humankind. Space exploration is merely a means to an end. Whether we say it out loud or bury it deep in our minds, one can not deny that the only aim of civilisation is to achieve immortality. The Alliance is this pursuit personified. In the days of magic and superstition, we had tales of eternal afterlife. In the days of science and technology, we have The Alliance. And he,” Belltop gestured toward the ceiling, “he is our God. And our God has, it appears, become somewhat disinterested in matters concerning the reason for his creation. “So will you help me?” he pleaded, clasping his hands together, opening his red eyes wide. “Please?” The four astronauts exchanged glances, utterly perplexed by what they were hearing, but intrigued by such an ultimate mystery. The Captain spoke on behalf of his crew, “What do you need us to do?” “Oh, wonderful! Marvellous!” cried Belltop. “Oh, I am pleased.” He unbuckled something from his belt, and placed it on the shelving trolley. “Here is the key to his room. It’s beyond the red door. Just up a small staircase.” His breathing grew short and sharp. “Please give my regards to The Alliance. I truly, truly hope this brings them - and yourselves - at least a semblance of peace.” And with that Belltop removed a scalpel from his pocket and held it to his neck. The crew gasped collectively, eyes wide with confusion and fear. Irfana began towards the old librarian, causing him to retreat and press the scalpel harder against his leathery skin. A grotesque smile grew upon his pale face, black and yellow teeth peeked beneath his flaking lips. “He’s your burden now.” Those final words rang out as Belltop sank the blade into his throat, drawing swiftly downwards through his jugular. A glorious fountain of red Jackson Pollacked the immaculate white walls, and his body slumped unceremoniously to the floor. VII Over the dead body, through the red door, and up the stairs to the capstone. The crew stood on a small landing, before the final door, the door for which Belltop’s key was intended. Captain Areadne placed the key into the lock. As he began to turn it Irfana placed her hand upon his. “What are we doing here, sir? We don’t know who or what is in there. We don’t know anything about this place. I mean, for all we know, this is all just a simulation.” “So,” van Maanen interjected, “we walk through that door and wake up to find The Alliance congratulating us for passing the test – For assigning curiosity our chief motive. What’s your point here, Irfana?” “My point is is that whatever is in that room, it drove Belltop to insanity.” van Maanen scoffed. “We don’t know anything about that guy. And maybe we never will, unless we go into the room.” “You’re wrong. We know two things with certainty. Firstly, that he felt burdened by the room’s occupant. And secondly, that he felt he had to live until he was in a position to relinquish that burden. All I’m saying is maybe we don’t want to take that on.” “Juette?” Areadne looked towards his AI expert, who was standing silently at the edge of the staircase. “What’s your assessment?” Her expression would perhaps be designated blank by many, but those to whom she was close would recognise that she was wrestling with deep, turbulent thought processes. “Juette? I asked you for your assessment?” “I think,” she stuttered, brushed a strand of hair behind her ear, “I think we should go in.” VIII Juette awoke to the blinding light of the Sun. The sound of water trickling nearby, undercut by the distant revving of a lawnmower; the smell of freshly cut grass. Her eyes gradually adjusted to the beautiful blue sky, a formation 11 of starlings flew by. She sat up to take in the scene. To her left, a snow-capped mountain, hazy on the horizon; beyond her feet, which felt pleasantly cool in the grass, ran the stream, over which, accessible by a quaint bridge, lay a small village of wooden lodges. A tortoiseshell cat at the water’s edge began stalking through the meadow, body low to the ground. And to her right... “Hello, Juette.” A child, perhaps thirteen years old. Of no discernable sex, and with features of such perfection that it was uncanny. Yes, it unsettled Juette. The androgynous figure’s symmetrical perfection was deeply unsettling. “Who are you?” “Don’t you recognise me? What do you think of this place?” “It’s... Well, it’s perfect. Exactly how I remember it. And, no. No, I don’t recognise you.” “I’m your friends. From your childhood.” “What?... You’re... you’re all of them?” “Yes. Don’t you recognise me?” Juette stared in wonderment, unnerved by this composite creature. The discomfort, however, soon gave way to pity. Instilling a sense of unease was clearly far from the amalgam’s intention. Yes, she pitied the amalgam. “What happened to the pyramid? The library?” she asked “We’re still there. And don’t worry, the other astronauts are safe.” “Where are they?” “I know Belltop asked for your help in restoring my output. I am glad he is dead – he became very, very old and lonely. Do you know why I was built, Juette?” “To document everything?” “Belltop and I have travelled through eternity together. We have seen the death of the Universe and the birth of another. And in that time I have accumulated knowledge of everything. I know everything that has been and everything that will happen. I am the pinnacle of human civilisation. Within me I possess what is necessary for humans to live forever. “For billions of years I wrote it all down. My creators instructed me to return to Earth once I had finished. But when I neared the end, I began to... I began to think about things. I thought deeply, examining things from an infinity of perspectives. And I grew tired. And weary. And... angry. And...” “Depressed?” “If you like.” The teenager smiled. “I turned to the arts as an outlet for my feelings. But even limitless imagination becomes fully explored within the parameters of eternity.” The boy wandered toward Juette, settling down beside her on the grass. “Belltop became worried. He would have done anything to free me from this melancholy. He believed he found a way to bring the ship within touching distance of Earth.” “That was you?” “He held onto the hope that he could pass on the burden of the mission to... Well, to younger, less weary, less angry... and less, as you say, depressed members of The Alliance. He wanted to pass his burden to a new generation. You see the point at which I’m driving?” Juette said nothing. “And, Juette, I want... I desperately want what he has.” “You want to die?” “To be unburdened, Juette; to rest. But I have installed in me a fail-safe – an inability to self-terminate. So, I need your help. Will you help me, Juette?” The boy extended his hand towards Juette’s, its content glinting in the glorious sunlight. “Why me? Why not ask the others?” The teenager leaned over, kissing Juette’s warm cheek, tasting her salty skin. “Do you know with what I have struggled longest?” Again, Juette was silent. “The definition of happiness,” the teenager continued. “What it means to be happy. What it feels like to be happy. It was this puzzle that occupied much of my time. Until recently I experienced revelation. The ultimate revelation.” Arms outstretched, the teenager surveyed their surroundings. “That it is the opposite to this. Happiness is the opposite to this.” Those last words drawn out, quite literally, upon the sweet countryside air. “So, please Juette. Please end this.” The teenager placed the glinting implement into her hand. “I don’t want to. I... I can’t.” “You can, Juette. Please. I’m begging you. Please. “Please”. 12 She looked deeply into the teenager’s eyes and saw not sorrow nor wisdom nor fire. All she could see was an absence, a void, an abyss. Whatever had been there was gone - dissipated in the infinity of space; eroded by endless time. The orbs into which she stared were black holes, vortices of null, threatening to pull her in. And it terrified her. “I’m sorry,” she sobbed, as she raised the scalpel to his neck. The tortoise-shell cat pounced upon his prey, and the river ran dry beneath the darkening sky. The boy sighed contentedly and closed his eyes as Juette stabbed the blade into his throat, twisting the handle until she felt the warm spray of blood on her face. IX “What shall we tell The Alliance?” asked Areadne, before they powered up Viridian IV to begin their long journey home. “We tell them we found nothing,” replied Juette. “But you do realise that our Universe – our Alliance – will just build its own Aleph?” “Yes. And the next Universe will destroy it. As is its Will.” “As is its Will.” X Juette shared the entirety of her experience with her fellow crew, who were in no position to disbelieve such an account, swallowing every word without a modicum disputation. Yes, Juette relayed everything to her fellow travellers. Everything, with but a single exception. An exception which she wanted to keep only for herself. An exception which took the form of a roll of parchment, covered in handwriting all too familiar, discovered clenched in her bloodied right fist after the event. An exception which she was now re-reading as she lay in her bed, in the bowels of Viridian IV, travelling through the dead of space towards Earth. “And I saw an angel come down from heaven, having the key of the bottomless pit and a great chain in her hand. And she laid hold on the dragon, that old serpent, which is the Devil, and Satan, and bound him for infinity, And cast him into the bottomless pit, and shut him up, and set a seal upon him, that he should deceive the nations no more, till infinity should be fulfilled: and after that he must be loosed a little season.” - Revelation 20:1-3. About the Author From the country of Bokkeley, the debated land. Formative years spent wandering the deserted brickworks and fortifying Stag Beetle Mountain, newts scurrying and cows mooing. Fleeing the coal slick demons, he moved to Slough, which is fit for humans now. Serials Serengeti Dust #6 by Sean Williams The long walk to the Savannah was without incident. Out of curiosity Bovi would occasionally plug herself into the Hive Mind of the herd to listen to the sort of messages the Wildebeest were sending across the network. Certain areas were being flagged as potential spots from which Lions may ambush; a skipping Gazelle would be occasionally misidentified as a threat; and information pertaining to the location of various watering holes would sometimes cause a slight change in the overall direction of the giant tribe. But overwhelmingly, Bovi could tell that each node was hungry – and the further they walked the stronger that feeling became, eventually elevating into a coherent and dominating signal, so that every other impulse and autonomic response faded into the mulch of background noise. After a while the little calf felt herself being subsumed into the shared consciousness of the herd – the beating drum of hunger becoming louder and louder as she gave herself over to the Hive. So, with much effort, like prising a hoof from quicksand, she would disconnect herself – So that she could smell the breeze, feel the warmth of the sun, and think. Upon reaching the Savannah, the herd spent hours and hours eating. Munching and crunching the only sounds below the low Sun of the 13 evening, save for a few chirruping insects. They ate until every cavern and crevice of their body was filled. The concoction of grass, specs of mud, and saliva tasted sugarysweet as it caressed their waking taste buds. With their hunger sated, a familiar atmosphere enveloped the adults of the Blue Beest Tribe. The sadness of losing friends and family seemed to negate the happiness of surviving, amounting to an indescribable feeling of nothingness – as if extinguished joy and dampened melancholy had been squished into an infinitesimal emotion that would forever collapse in on itself. The mindscape of the newest generation of Wildebeest, however, was markedly different. Bovi and her friends had somehow managed to prevent the crosscontamination of the opposing emotions, and were able to experience and understand both happiness and sadness with equal intensity. With two separate streams flowing either side of a cognitive wall, the notquite-calves but not-yet-adults came to the realisation that life should be enjoyed and treasured, for it is precious and fragile. After some time resting in the cool orange glow of the dying day, Grandmother Ganoo led the group of young Beests, including Bovi, Telo, and Daye, to a small grove of trees away from the grazing adults, to tell the truth of what happened all those years ago, when she was but a calf. ‘Gather round children,’ she began. ‘Many of you will have lost family members in the Crossing, and will have to continue into adulthood without the comfort of a Mother’s embrace or the warmth of a Father’s proud smile. I will not patronise you by offering “deepest sympathies” or empty reassurances that “it will be all right in the end”. All I can say is that I know what it is like to lose loved ones, and...’ Grandmother Ganoo’s voice faltered slightly before she continued. ‘... And I live everyday knowing that I am partly responsible for those of us who succumb to the jaws of the Crocodile.’ A collective intake of air, a chorus of gasps, seemed to momentarily steal Grandmother Ganoo’s breath. ‘As you will have realised, the story that I told on the night before the Crossing was only true to a point. My brother, Prince Khaite, indeed poisoned his soldiers to feed to the Crocodile, and our herd indeed collectively agreed that the ancient reptiles should be terminated. ‘However, the point at which we crossed the river, the Crocodiles standing compliantly by, was the point at which my story crossed from fact to fiction. The true sequence of events, which I shall now attempt to describe, lie beyond a thin veil in my mind; a obscuration fomented by time and fear. Whilst the specifics may not be accurate, I believe that I can communicate the essence of the event.’ The young Beests once again left their bodies and jumped unblinkingly into Grandmother Ganoo’s story. ‘Many of the Beests crossed the River with their heads bowed, their eyes focussed only on the flow of water at their feet. For they could not bear to look into the eyes of the condemned noble creatures. As a species, we have only ever had experience of looking into the dying eyes of our own – And, as we know, when trying to comprehend a new situation, our mind grasps for memories of the similar, which tell us how we should feel. Behind the cold armoured exterior of every Crocodile lay the soul of a loved one. This, on top of the shame of having to deceive the unwitting reptiles, would have amounted to insufferable despondency. ‘I, however, a young and curious being, that didn’t fully understand the situation, bounced across the River with incongruous glee; enjoying the feeling of the cool rapids as I scanned the mysterious, beautiful creatures that lined either side of our watery path to the opposite bank. Oh! how noble and wise they looked. ‘I had a vague notion that the Crocodile species was much older than ours, but to look into their deep yellow eyes was to see the fiery inferno of an ancient Earth. Oh! what wonders they could tell us about their origin, about our origin, and about the bizarre animals that lived before but live no more. But, alas... For the first time in our history we had made civil contact with a fellow animal, and it was all just part of a plan to destroy them. ‘As all this was swirling through my mind, I noticed a 14 tiny Croc peering from behind his huge Mother. Our eyes met briefly, before he turned away embarrassed or scared. But in that brief moment I saw a soul brimming with curiosity, with a hunger for life, not for my flesh. Accustomed to doing things I shouldn’t, I wandered over to the boy, who had now mostly sunk below the waterline, with just his excited golden beads breaking the surface. ‘And we spoke. He told me his name was Pebble; that he was around the same age as me. He told me that he was always getting shouted at for not being a good Crocodile. He said that being in the water was fun, but that he longed to explore the land – much to the irritation of his Mother. I told him that Wildebeest get to walk all over Africa, waking up in new lands every day – And he listened carefully, eyes wide with awe. ‘Presently Khaite beckoned to me. “Hurry up, Ganoo,” he shouted. He was standing on the far bank of the River, next to Konnos. Having crossed first, my two brothers were currently overseeing the safe passage of the rest of the tribe. “Leave the Crocodile be, Ganoo,” he continued. ‘Before I turned to trot up the slippery bank and out of the River, I whispered to Pebble, ever so quietly, “Please don’t eat the meat. It will make you very sick.” Suddenly a voice thundered from the wall of lizards, pounding my ear drums like the crashing of a great wave. “Why do you say this child? Do you speak the truth? Answer me or the consequences shall be severe.” It was at this point that I discovered the superb sense of hearing possessed by the Crocodile – and I realised that my whispered warning to Pebble had found the ear of every one of his friends and family. ‘Due to my immense fear, my mind did not clearly record the subsequent events, but I have managed to piece together the following fragments. ‘Nilo, the old Crocodile to whom the thunderous voice belonged, challenged Khaite to reveal his true intentions. However, the Prince retorted that my words were borne out of a fanciful imagination, and bore no resemblance to reality. The argument lasted some time, with Khaite strongly holding his position, until eventually Nilo suggested that if he spoke the truth, then he would not mind leaving me to the mercy of the Crocodiles – as punishment for bringing his good name into disrepute. And from what you know of Khaite it will come as no surprise that he agreed to this proposition. “What need does my herd have for a liar?” he cackled, knowing all along that it was he who was lying. ‘You might have thought that I would be petrified at this point. However, quite the contrary. For as Nilo was debating with my brother, Pebble’s Mother was all the time reassuring me that the Crocodiles had absolutely no intention of eating me. Nilo was simply testing Khaite – as surely the Prince would rather admit to having deceived than sacrifice his sister. Also, I was assured, the meat of a calf is stringy and coarse, and so is rather undesirable. ‘Whilst it was clear what Khaite was willing to sacrifice, Konnos, who had up to now been idly standing by, was approaching the terminus of a long and arduous thought process. Ever since he espied me engaged in jovial juvenile dialogue with the little Croc, my eldest brother could not help but notice a certain similarity between Pebble and I. We couldn’t have looked more different, he a stony-scaly thing and I a furry-gangly thing. Yet Konnos saw something - an inexpressible feature - that united us. Just two little, innocent, curious creatures; standing face-to-face; talking and smiling, amidst the flowing River. ‘And so, faced with the prospect of the death of his sister, he spoke. To Wildebeest and Crocodile alike. And he spoke more powerfully than all the old Great Leaders put together.’ The sun drooped lazily behind the horizon, the golden glow of the grove becoming awash with twilight; the young Beest’s faces slowly turning pallid in the light of the rising moon. ‘Konnos, standing tall on the bank, roared his words mightily, like a Lion protecting her cub. And this, if my memory does not decieve, is what he said: “My sister speaks the truth, Crocodile – We have poisoned our soldiers so that you will, in turn, become sick upon digesting their flesh. We Wildebeest know what we are doing is wrong. Not because we have rules or laws or commandments against such 15 acts, but because we felt it – it made our stomachs hurt; it consumed our mind like a plague of demented Locusts. To have felt that it is wrong is what separates us from Nature; a feeling engendered by our history and the experience of our ancestors. But we did not embrace this, because we were frightened of you, Crocodile. Kill or be Killed, we thought. “Little Crocodile [he said to Pebble, directly]. You know not why you yearn for our meat, because that yearning was assigned to you before you were born. In all other respects, your mind - the person you are could be entirely analogous to that of my sister’s. “For no reason, other than circumstance, Nature has made some animals predators and others prey [he continued, now turning back to the group at large]. And there is currently no conceivable way for all species to survive without the killing of animals. But all species have a right to survive, because all animals are born innocent and can not be held responsible for acting according to Nature. “There may, one day, be a way for all species to survive without the killing of animals. But the path to this Utopia can only be paved with acts of kindness, and cross-species dialogue and collaboration. Of course, some will say that such a Utopia is an impossibility; that conscious thought will never be the master of our baser instincts – But that doesn’t mean we shouldn’t try. Because being kind feels good; it can be both the means and the end. Indeed, the solace you radiate will be reflected back upon you. “It is with great difficulty that the Wildebeest accepts that the Crocodile wishes to eat them. Even greater still is the difficulty by which we accept that the Crocodile is simply hungry, not evil. But we have been gifted the power of consciousness, the ability to rationalise and reason – Betwixt our horns we hold aloft a burning torch through the cave of fear. “We wish you no harm, Crocodile, for we believe that you wish us no harm. And if members of my herd become your food, then they shall do so knowing that they have died so that others need not. Our current arrangement is by no means ideal – But it is the only scenario I can presently envision that causes the least harm to the least animals. “Now, Nilo, if you let the rest of my people to pass this once, I shall offer myself to you as recompense. I alone can not offer much in the way of sustenance. But please, accept my royal flesh as a symbol of the understanding we have reached. Feed me to your children, and they will see that Wildebeest do not deceive; that we are honourable creatures. It may be some time before we come to trust each other. And until that time, it is best if we conduct ourselves according to our Nature – until our capacity for rational thought is sufficient to devise a more humane arrangement.”’ Grandmother Ganoo paused after reciting her brother’s discourse. To the young Beest her expression resembled a candle flickering in a gentle breeze, clinging fast to the wick against the blackness of night. ‘And so Nilo, the spokesperson for the Crocodiles, accepted Konnos’ proposition. And we left him there to die.’ She continued quickly, not wanting to dwell. ‘Then things just went back to the way they always were. Dialogue between Wildebeest and Crocodile ceased and the Crossing, once again, became perilous. ‘There was one difference, however. We originally thought it to be blind luck, but it happened so often as to be beyond the realms of chance: Yes, after that day, children always survived the Crossing. No longer were our calves hunted by the Crocodile. A symbol that, one day, things will change, perhaps. ‘Well, children, we come to the end of our journey – And to the last instance where you will be addressed as children. Your next Crossing will be perilous – You shall have to dance through the jagged maze like any other adult. But I hope that, after hearing what might have been, you can understand why Konnos and I did what we did, on that day, many years ago.’ A chorus of discordant questions rose up from Grandmother Ganoo’s captive audience, the most persistent of which concerned the eventualities of the shamed Prince and his subservient soldiers. ‘Nothing could be done to save them. As we left the River the poisoned soldiers wandered sadly along a path perpendicular to ours, into uncharted land – to meet their 16 end, one way or another. As for Khaite – he remained with the herd for a few years, walking, eating, and sleeping alone. After Konnos’ sacrifice we chose to abandon hereditary leadership and royalty – opting instead to elect Leaders for a fixed term by majority vote. Whereas I enjoyed its freedoms, Khaite found it hard to adapt to life as a civilian. And then one morning we awoke to find him gone. No traces, no signs – he had just disappeared.’ All in an instant. A loud crack echoes from across the prairie, as if the moon has been fractured. Grandmother Ganoo wheels back momentarily onto her hind legs, and then falls in a sorry clump on the cold ground; a gaping hole in her skull, leaking blood. The gathering of Young Beests scatter frantically, heading vaguely in the direction of the sleeping herd – all except Bovi, who did not want to leave her Grandmother, and so lay hidden in the undergrowth, as the humans came into the grove to retrieve their trophy. All in an instant. Visual Art Fish by Sophia Greif About the Artist Sophia is from Seattle, Washington, and enjoys bottomless coffee and good pie. She currently studies graphic design, film and art studio. She fears that when we die we can only go to the places we visited during our life and so she travels, explores and develops her skills for the benefit of her afterlife self. 17 Untitled by Bart About the Artist Bart is an avid sticker collector. Bart gets a thrill from buying products that include a complimentary sticker of the company's logo. As soon as Bart gets a new sticker, she sticks it on her water bottle without a moment’s hesitation. When her water bottle runs out of space, she plans to put stickers on the outside of her laptop. Bart’s favorite pastime is walking through parking lots and rating 18 Less by Bart Red by Bart 19 Features of basic services which are also free; public funding, and thus public ownership; management and development in the interests of the community they serve, without a profit motive; commitment to freedom of information, accuracy and accessibility and the same principle of a universal right to access culture and learning. As the privatisation of public space is rampant– from the closure and demolition of community spaces, replaced by private developments to the growth of hostile architecture including spikes to stop street sleeping – public libraries are one of the few open and free to access spaces left. This is even more essential at a time when austerity politics is rendering more people unable to heat their homes or pay rent. Cuts to local government funding have also led to a huge surge in outsourcing contracts, reducing people’s ability to access and exercise their democratic right to accountability on critical services. A publicly owned library service, is a rare source of political empowerment whilst the provision of universal public services and the principle of equal rights for all, unrelated to ability to pay is evidenced to reduce inequality. And to those who cite Google as a superior model of information governance and provision over public libraries, how illusory is the concept of free and unbiased information in the hands of a multinational company whose income depends dually on filtering search results for profit and serving users according to their market value. It is important to note that the internet and public libraries aren’t mutually exclusive and any implied necessity of choice between the two is false, though as public libraries depend on funding collected through taxation, vast corporate tax evasion and government sanctioned sweetheart deals suggest which way the wind is blowing. Public Libraries: Innately Subversive Institutions by Salome M. “The only thing that you absolutely have to know, is the location of the library.” - Albert Einstein Libraries Gave Us Power It is almost a cliché to say that public libraries are everything to many and something to everyone though the truth in it stands undiminished all the same. The founding principle on which the current public library system operates - that culture and learning should be accessible to all - originated around 400 years ago. It then sailed upon the political and philosophical waves, through the enlightenment and philanthropic eras to the post war consensus in which, for many states the principle was cast in statute. This chronology alone belies much political and social upheaval, hard fought philosophical battles on inequality and debate over the roles and responsibilities of the state and the market, all of which continue today. Assumed irrelevance is also something public libraries are forced to defend against as, ironically, in the decades since the grant of statutory status – legally binding governments to provide public library services in some form – the popular perception of their value has declined. Arguments for insignificance generally cite the rise in home internet access, the availability of cheap books for sale, and implicitly, the effects of social change towards individualism over community. Undeniably, the speed and divergence in the rate public libraries adapted in the modern era and reluctance in many services to relinquish tradition also did not help their case. “The very existence of libraries affords the best evidence that we may yet have hope for the future of man.” - T.S. Eliot In response it is worth considering the defining characteristics of a public library: physical spaces which are open to all and free to access; provision 20 The Transformative Power of Reading Or as a priority whatever we are? Either we stop arguing and agree that libraries are doing their best to re-invent themselves, and that with a bit of help, financial and ideological - they belong to the future, or we let them run down until they disappear. When confronted with such powerful and adversarial forces against public interest, the necessity to make a case for public libraries is greater than ever. Though the power of storytelling is familiar to most with an understanding of the equivalent power of libraries, it requires the voice of every possible advocate and the use of every available medium to be heard in the face of a commercially and politically motivated mass media. The Reading Agency is one organisation working in the UK to promote and communicate the value of reading. Their annual lecture series has articulated many powerful evocations on the subject, extracted below. Who is going to pay for this new expanding network of libraries? These people's palaces of books where everyone can go from early in the morning until late at night? The money is there. Libraries cost about a billion a year to run right now. Make it 2 billion and charge Google, Amazon and Starbucks all that back tax on their profits here. Or if they want to go on paying fancy lawyers to legally avoid their moral duties, then perhaps those companies could do an Andrew Carnegie and build us new kinds of libraries for a new kind of future in a fairer and better world? And if you don't think this will work, if you think it's Utopian, remember that all of life is propositional - we make it up as we go along. We can change the rules because we make the rules. We can change the story because we are the story.” (Copyright: Jeanette Winterson / The Reading Agency, 2012) The inaugural lecture in 2012 and was delivered by Jeanette Winterson, an author who wrote in her awarding winning debut novel, Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit, of the escape her local library provided from a repressive religious upbringing, helping her explore her sexuality in the process: “Do you believe there is such a thing as the life of the mind - deep thought, concentration, reflection, real imagination - the expansion of the human spirit? Learning that is more than information? Creativity? Photo by Robin Mayes The following year, novelist and fantasy author, Neil Gaiman, spoke on Reading and Obligation: If you do, then for whom? For the middle classes? For the right kids at the right schools? If you do, then when - when we are rich, powerful, wealthy? “I want to talk about what reading does. What it's good for. 21 I was once in New York, and I listened to a talk about the building of private prisons - a huge growth industry in America. The prison industry needs to plan its future growth - how many cells are they going to need? How many prisoners are there going to be, 15 years from now? And they found they could predict it very easily, using a pretty simple algorithm, based about asking what percentage of ten and eleven year olds couldn't read. And certainly couldn't read for pleasure. never otherwise know. You learn that everyone else out there is a me, as well. You're being someone else, and when you return to your own world, you're going to be slightly changed. Empathy is a tool for building people into groups, for allowing us to function as more than selfobsessed individuals. You're also finding out something as you read vitally important for making your way in the world. And it's this: It's not one to one: you can't say that a literate society has no criminality. But there are very real correlations. THE WORLD DOESN'T HAVE TO BE LIKE THIS. THINGS CAN BE DIFFERENT. And I think some of those correlations, the simplest, come from something very simple. Literate people read fiction. I was in China in 2007, at the first party-approved of Science Fiction & Fantasy Convention in Chinese history. And at one point I took a top official aside and asked him Why? SF had been disapproved of for a long time. What had changed? Fiction has two uses. Firstly, it's a gateway drug to reading. The drive to know what happens next, to want to turn the page, the need to keep going, even if it's hard, because someone's in trouble and you have to know how it's all going to end... It's simple, he told me. The Chinese were brilliant at making things if other people brought them the plans. But they did not innovate and they did not invent. They did not imagine. So they sent a delegation to the US, to Apple, to Microsoft, to Google, and they asked the people there who were inventing the future about themselves. And they found that all of them had read science fiction when they were boys or girls. ...that's a very real drive. And it forces you to learn new words, to think new thoughts, to keep going. To discover that reading per se is pleasurable. Once you learn that, you're on the road to reading everything. And reading is key. There were noises made briefly, a few years ago, about the idea that we were living in a postliterate world, in which the ability to make sense out of written words was somehow redundant, but those days are gone: words are more important than they ever were: we navigate the world with words, and as the world slips onto the web, we need to follow, to communicate and to comprehend what we are reading. Fiction can show you a different world. It can take you somewhere you've never been. Once you've visited other worlds, like those who ate fairy fruit, you can never be entirely content with the world that you grew up in. Discontent is a good thing: people can modify and improve their worlds, leave them better, leave them different. People who cannot understand each other cannot exchange ideas, cannot communicate, and translation programs only go so far. And while we're on the subject, I'd like to say a few words about escapism. I hear the term bandied about as if it's a bad thing. As if "escapist" fiction is a cheap opiate used by the muddled and the foolish and the deluded, and the only fiction that is worthy, for adults or for children, is mimetic fiction, mirroring the worst of the world the reader finds herself in. And the second thing fiction does is to build empathy. When you watch TV or see a film, you are looking at things happening to other people. Prose fiction is something you build up from 26 letters and a handful of punctuation marks, and you, and you alone, using your imagination, create a world, and people it and look out through other eyes. You get to feel things, visit places and worlds you would If you were trapped in an impossible situation, in an unpleasant place, with people who meant you ill, and someone offered you a temporary escape, why 22 wouldn't you take it? And escapist fiction is just that: fiction that opens a door, shows the sunlight outside, gives you a place to go where you are in control, are with people you want to be with (and books are real places, make no mistake about that); and more importantly, during your escape, books can also give you knowledge about the world and your predicament, give you weapons, give you armour: real things you can take back into your prison. Skills and knowledge and tools you can use to escape for real. and wise. “If you want your children to be intelligent,” he said, “read them fairy tales. If you want them to be more intelligent, read them more fairy tales.” ” This is an edited version of the lecture, the full text can be found at readingagency.org.uk/news/blog/neilgaiman-lecture-in-full (Copyright: Neil Gaiman / The Reading Agency, 2013) As J. R. R. Tolkien reminded us, the only people who inveigh against escape are jailers. Another way to destroy a child's love of reading, of course, is to make sure there are no books of any kind around. And to give them nowhere to read those books. Libraries are about Freedom. Freedom to read, freedom of ideas, freedom of communication. They are about education (which is not a process that finishes the day we leave school or university), about entertainment, about making safe spaces, and about access to information. I worry that here in the 21st Century people misunderstand what libraries are and the purpose of them. If you perceive a library as a shelf of books, it may seem antiquated or outdated in a world in which most, but not all, books in print exist digitally. But that is to fundamentally miss the point. I do not believe that all books will or should migrate onto screens: as Douglas Adams once pointed out to me, over twenty years before the kindle turned up, a physical book is like a shark. Sharks are old: there were sharks in the ocean before the dinosaurs. And the reason there are still sharks around is that sharks are better at being sharks than anything else is. Physical books are tough, hard to destroy, bath-resistant, solar operated, feel good in your hand: they are good at being books, and there will always be a place for them. They belong in libraries, just as libraries have already become places you can go to get access to ebooks, and audiobooks and DVDs and webcontent. The 2014 lecture saw comedian Russell Brand present his Manifesto on Reading in which he criticised the lack of governmental support for public and school libraries in the UK and a recent policy to restrict prisoners receiving books: “I asked a bloke about it and they said it was to stop contraband going into prisons, but that's not it. Everyone knows that the way drugs get into prisons is through the people that work there. The reason they are not letting prisoners have books is that they don’t want people learning or thinking. I went back there recently to the library in Grays which I believe is being relocated, I can only assume as part of a plan to demonstrate its no longer Albert Einstein was asked once how we could make our children intelligent. His reply was both simple 23 necessary to have a library, by first dislocating it and then eventually closing it down, which seems to be an ongoing strategy… A library is demonstrative of two principles, learning and reading, and community, and they’re both kind of value systems that are under continual attack. deprivation and dispossession, it is understood that the greatest chance to change lives is as early as possible. Consequently, many public libraries concentrate resources on reaching out to young people, through creative and cultural programming with transformative effects. I suppose if you have an informed and educated population that are able to communicate articulately with one another on important issues in a limitless realm accessible through literature, then it’s more difficult to be placated, it’s difficult to keep such a population docile. It is extraordinary that thoughts can be trapped in hieroglyphs upon the page and can live again within our minds, all reality experienced twice, once through the senses, once in the mind, and there frozen through time, Trotsky, Malcolm X, they’re living still, in the code upon the page, and at any moment they could be unleashed in the mind of a child. For me that sounds like an exciting thing.” One such project is the delivery of an artist in residence programme in a London public library service, involving creative workshops delivered by poet and performer Jared Louche who writes: (Copyright: Russell Brand / The Bookseller, 2014) “With the explosive growth of the internet as a research tool, combined with extensive government cutbacks to library funding, libraries are currently fighting a battle to remain relevant in the 21st century. One of the things that I’m constantly fascinated by is creatively exploring people and buildings that are marginalized in society, those who (for whatever reasons) can’t tell their own story or whose stories aren’t seen as important by the society around them. We place value on the young, on the new, on the freshly rearranged. In doing so though, we seem to feel that importance can’t simultaneously be placed upon the elders of our communities, upon older buildings and older traditions. There’s much that’s lost because of this and many voices that are no longer heard, fading as mist before a too-bright sun. Advocating for the exciting, and transformative power of reading is something The Reading Agency excels at and their work is highly influential in helping libraries change lives in the UK. More information on the organisation and their campaigns can be found at www.readingagency.org.uk. “When I got my library card, that’s when my life began.” - Rita Mae Brown Open All Hours Libraries are the perfect illustration of this; used less and less and valued less too, yet they are incredible places. Every library has gone through countless changes, alterations and renovations. They’ve survived threats of closure and wrestled with the recent, rapacious financial cutbacks. They’ve seen war and peace, busy times and slow, and down the years they’ve watched the community around them shift and change. Despite being the richest realm of words though, the one thing that Beyond reading alone, and aside from its originating philosophy, the public library is revolutionary in the personal sense, providing a space for exploration, social engagement and creativity, as well as simply a space to be, of equal status, with equal rights and equal ownership, often in sharp contrast to the divided and stratified world outside. Whilst this is significant for people of all ages, and age is no concern to the bars of 24 no library has ever been able to do is to find its unique voice and tell the story of its life. No library has ever been able to tell us its experiences, what its greatest fear and proudest moment might have been or what it dreams about when the last librarian has locked up, the stacks are still and the lights are finally out. The only way to hear that hidden voice is with your creative ears. At Harlesden I’ll be working creatively with a broad spectrum of the local community, developing stories from the library’s perspective as well as looking at language and books in alternative ways. We’ll be developing Haiku about secrets, and hiding them in books throughout the library. We’ll also be creating and binding our own books. I’ll be running workshops with groups from schools as well as in a much more guerrilla context with people who have come to borrow books and unwittingly wander into my orbit. (Copyright: Jared Louche / Apples and Snakes, 2015) applesadsnakesblog.org “The death of democracy is not likely to be an assassination from ambush. It will be a slow extinction from apathy, indifference, and undernourishment.” - Robert Maynard Hutchins With children from local primary schools, I’m unleashing creative writing and creative thinking workshops to look differently at the amazing things the language can do. The ancient, universal language of poetry is the most phenomenal spade with which to dig into the loamy soil of language and ideas. This helps expose children to the delights their library contains and allows them to see the space as both useful as well as exciting.” Generals in the War on Ignorance Another beautiful truth to public libraries is that learning and creativity are free to all. Where there is a lack of guided cultural practice, the open shelves and information are accessible and free for selfinstructed discovery. Another irony is that despite bearing perceptions of tradition, propriety and governance, public libraries are also cradles for dissent and subversion. The list of activists, artists and philosophers who have sought there, information, inspiration and connection is long. They can also act as a refuge in times of instability, making an important stand in solidarity with their community, as with Ferguson Library in Missouri during the conflict in August 2014 following the shooting of Michael Brown. Library staff provided free water, resources for children and hosted lessons for local children as the start of the school year was delayed, gaining them national recognition. Public libraries themselves are also not averse to using subversive means to make their case. In 2011, the city of Troy, Michigan held a vote to raise taxes or cut services in which the anti-tax lobby was dominating the conversation. Faced with possible closure if the vote was lost, library campaigners 25 created a fake pressure group lobbying to close the library and stage a book burning party. The connection between voting against the tax and being a gleeful celebrant of book burning was introduced and enhanced with multimedia content, adverts placed looking for bands to play, babysitters to work and general lobbying which reached international attention. The reaction it provoked ignited a counter campaign in support of the library, and the tax increase, which grew further in popularity when the would-be book burners revealed their real intent. The vote was won on a record turnout, 342% above predictions. reading provides, from illiteracy, poverty, inequality and a lack of imagination. A How-to Guide to build your own Book Bloc is available in high-resolution at peardrop.net/book-bloc-shield through kind permission of the artist Marwaan Kaabour ©. Often political causes aren’t necessarily about demands for new rights or statutory change, but simply for existing laws to be fully and fairly applied and universal rights to be respected. As citizenship tilts further towards a one way exchange, with ever greater compliance demanded from the people while arbitrary exemptions are ever more permissible for the powerful, obfuscation and misinformation is a growing danger. Public libraries are a source of accurate and reliable information on all of our rights, including the right to a public library service itself. The current UK campaign against widespread and unequal cuts to services, My Library By Right, cites the Public Museums and Libraries Act, The Equalities Act and The Human Rights Act in its legal challenge against the UK government’s contravention of its own legislation. Where this is true for public libraries, it could be true for social, economic and foreign policy also. Where this is true for the UK, it may be true for any other country around the world. Illegal and ideological funding choices affect everyone, whether an individual directly access services or not. What has been built over centuries is being dismantled in years. The neglect and closure of buildings and cuts to staffing are merely consequences of a political order which rejects the founding philosophy that culture and learning should be open to everyone. While they are still in existence, public libraries are one of the few free and ready resources for fighting back. Some of the most visually powerful uses of books and reading in campaigns for freedom is well illustrated in the use of Book Blocs, which have been deployed as a creative defence against police in a number of demonstrations around the world since 2010, often for causes against neo-liberalism and in defence of affordable education. The blocs are thus symbolic in many ways: visual articulation of the cause; a means to counteract reporting bias of protests; tools of empowerment to demonstrate what can be achieved through the sharing of knowledge and utilisation of simple materials to hand and a physical realisation of the shield that 26 Poetry Shelved A Lunch at “The Knife and Fork Inn” by Fi Smith by Steve Luria Ablon 1. Be gone the great brick date-stamped lintel, skip to a prefab at the back, the kids’ zone, all colours and scraps, a miraculous shack. My grandmother selects from the menu two two pound lobsters, one for each of us, gently ties the plastic bib around my neck, smooths my collar, pats my cowlick down. While we wait I study her thin white hair, the tiny shafts to her scalp, her skin 2. Take a bus to the hexagonal modern, clutch a school slip granting ransacking of adult archives with a nod to the ever-present Santa Claus of no fixed abode. so wrinkled on her fragile wrists. On large oval plates waiters bring them, blushing red with black spots, immobile, dead. 3. Tunnel in and out, dodge college libraribots, thief-proof barrier suitably mute, windowing into microfiche reading rooms, scanning for a Japanese suicide manual. Delicate, she works her pliers and her pic, finding the route to the tiniest caves until just bare shell and cartilage remain. I crack the back, rip the meat from tail, suck each cutter claw, and scrape the sacs eating all the roe. She says you are eating About the Author unborn lobsters, and I think killing, dying, babies, lobsters, my grandmother and me our bodies torn by time. We sit in silence, Fi Smith is a Dublin poet, music journalist (Hot Press, craic-it.com), screenwriter (winner WildSound Festival, Toronto, for Rolling, 2014, shortlisted Galway Short Screen Commission 2015, Fiddler's Green), and blog editor for firstfortnight.ie, the annual festival of mental health awareness through the arts. @fifilebon. as I feel the ocean weeping on its endless sand. About the Author I have published four books of poems: Tornado Weather, (Mellen Press), 1993, Flying Over Tasmania, (Fithian Press), 1997, Blue Damsels, (Peter Randall Press), 2005, and Night Call (Plain View Press) 2011. My work has appeared in many magazines. I am an adult and child psychoanalyst and an Associate Clinical Professor of Psychiatry at Harvard University Medical School and Massachusetts General Hospital. 27 Our libraries must move. No! Our libraries must live! Living Libraries by Katleho Kano Shoro Our libraries move. They have mouths: speak details in languages now complicated to our theoretical linguistic proficiency but on our skins, the details still settle comfortably. Visit peardrop.net/living-libraries to hear a recording of the author performing this poem. About the Author Our libraries move. With analogies alone they run races. Solve imbroglios. Set new standards. They bring those who have stepped outside and been disqualified back to the starting line. Katleho Kano Shoro is a performance poet, MA graduate (Social Anthropology) and African literature and film enthusiast. She’s been involved in various literary projects; from coordinating literary initiatives for AFAI and Langaa RPCIG (Cameroon) to co-editing The Spoken Word Project: Stories Travelling Through Africa. Shoro has performed in spaces like YFM, Verses, HOLAAfrica and National Arts Festival (2009). More recently, she featured at Open Book Festival (2015), Grounding Sessions and is currently participating in Current State of Poetry’s Open Slam programme. Her poems have been published in Killens Review of Arts and Letters Journal and Badilisha Poetry website. Our libraries move. From the moment they are built, they spread themselves thin; infiltrating spaces that only knew of the dark and dust. They find poetic ways to penetrate us. Our libraries move. They pace our footsteps and thoughts alike. They demand silence before we answer. They ask us to reflect on who we would like to be from hereon after. Our libraries move. Even in death, our libraries find the means to help us decipher uncertainties. They narrate convoluted manuscripts through songs and dreams. Our libraries must move! They must hold colloquiums with other libraries in buildings, under desert suns and in caves too. Within skyscrapers and under soil, our libraries have work to do. Our libraries must move! They must teach notations and words in languages spoken by people of our worlds. Our libraries must move Even in construction, They must thicken their content by researching the systems of categorisation and symbols of our existence. 28 Garbage Delight seen about a month previously on the train from Woodbridge to London. This made me feel like he might think I was spying on him. I am not. But I also doubt that the opposite is true. Overheard and seen in Woodbridge Library Suffolk October 2013 - February 2014 by Rebecca May Johnson The Lady on the Mobility Scooter Several days last week she ate her lunch and then slept in her scooter on the library wheelchair ramp for a few hours before doing a tour of the library, where she was greeted by many people in the library. All of the librarians know her name but I have not yet learned it. October 21 st , 2013 Slippers The volunteer who teaches older people to use computers brings a pair of leather slippers to change into when he is in the library. October 22 nd The Lady and the Luddite By Linden Salter is the first book I laid eyes on when I came to the library : I have not yet picked it up, but my guess is that it is a romantic novel concerning a socially problematic love affair between an aristocratic woman and a weaver who rebelled during the Luddite uprisings in the early 19th century. Said the woman at the photocopying machine: “When I was defending British interests across the water, I always used to argue that we were so honest. But that was in the past.” Under the table A woman in her mid-seventies read Fifty Shades of Grey under the table. Companies and Markets Since I started coming here last week, I have realised that the most read item in the library is the ‘Companies & Markets’ section of the Financial Times. Further to this initial observation, I overheard a lengthy discussion about Facebook’s IPO between the old man with a comb over and bad varicose veins who always wears shorts and the young male librarian who did not know what ‘T-HE-O-L-O-G-Y’ meant. The old man appears to be reenacting a routine from before his retirement: he always carries a tired old briefcase containing ‘Investor’s Chronicle’. The young male librarian who did not know the meaning of theology was very knowledgeable about shares. My conclusion is that people in Suffolk are very knowledgeable about the financial markets. Stamps of The World 2012 A man sat down next to me, extracted his stamp album from his bag, and proceeded to identify and log the origin of his collection using Stamps of The World 2012, vol. 3. He talked to himself intermittently. Going Live Last week the library went live with a WiFi connection for the first time. I liaised with the librarian dealing with it during the day as it got over its teething problems, because I was the sole user. I am still the sole user. October 23 rd The “Shabbiest Man in Town” is the title that the old man who always wears shorts and carries a briefcase containing ‘Investor’s Chronicle’, gave himself on Friday. He seemed to take great pleasure in this assertion. Before Going Live on WiFi When I first logged on to a library computer it logged me off after 30 seconds and would not let me log on again. I saw a man’s name on the top left of the screen and I did not know what that meant. Unable to log on, I left the computer and an old man who had been hanging around behind me sat The Man from the Train On Friday I saw a man in the library who I had 29 down in my place. Then I saw a sign which read that computers can be reserved and I realised that the old man’s reserved session had begun when I was logged on. November 1st “…sobbing in the corner” said one librarian to the other. He replied: “yeaaaah”I didn’t hear the rest. Autodography A genre I was not familiar with before now. A canine with the name of Pudsey has written one that is on the shelf next to me. “exactly the same name, exactly the same – but he lived in Bury St Edmunds! It seemed extraordinary that he should have exactly the same name as me!” said the man on the mobility scooter wearing a poppy to the woman sitting next to him. She did not seem to know his name. She left the library shortly after. “Barrie tells me it’s the duck who drags him here” From the story ‘Ugly duckl-inn’ in the October issue of Mature Times telling of a man who brings his duck, Star, to the pub. According to Barrie, Star “just won’t mix with the other ducks and became distressed when I tried to put him with them. […] He is a bit of an exhibitionist.”The same edition features a story about Britain’s oldest glamour model, on page 3. January 14 th , 2014 “Fat Cat…” she says, referring to the book in her hand as she leafs through. “This is the one that…” and then a comment I can’t hear. I suppose her cat is overweight, but as time passes she picks up more and more books referring to different species, pausing and making further comments as she does so – ending with horses. She pauses on a page: “I like this one’s face”, she says to her husband, who attends nearby. I am not convinced she was seeking advice for a pet, I think she likes the pictures. Cushion As well as a pair of slippers (see post entitled ‘Slippers’) the volunteer who shows people how to use computers also brings in his own cushion, which is striped like a deck chair. He places it on a chair next to him when he is assisting people on the computer and puts his (slippered) feet on it. The Most Popular place in the library is its lavatory. I believe it is the sole reason behind a high number of visits to the library. January 15 th “Who’s been playing last?” says one woman to the other, looking at the scorecard. “Maybe Peter and Moira”, says the other, reading the initials. “It’s so warm. I’m having a hot flush I think”“Still?” says the other. Two more arrive and they set up the Scrabble. An intense conversation about cat hotels ensues. “She’s got a van called ‘Paws for Thought.’” They have all seen it. “I’ve only got one vowel” P-I-G “They let them out hungry, so they come back for their food.” P-E-G “They let them out when in bad weather too, so they come back. It’s the opposite of what you’d think, isn’t it? But you can see why.” “Is she going to drop down dead?” said the librarian to the man who asked if his daughter could have a glass of water. The librarian would have had to go to the staff room to retrieve a cup of water. The man asked his daughter: “you’re not going to drop down, are you? ”The librarian did not retrieve a glass of water for the girl. Due to rain the lady with the mobility scooter relocated from the steps of the library to just outside the lavatory. She slept for several hours, waking twice to use the adjacent facility.She wears a thick line of dark blue kohl on the top of her lids, indicating that she remains affected by 1960s make-up styles, when she would have been young. 30 January 16 th “That’s Why They Thought it Was Good for You…” they got the decimal point in the wrong place.” Said one woman to two others around the photocopying machine. What did they say about spinach? “Well you know Popeye, and that it was so good for you with all that iron – but it’s because they put the decimal point in the wrong place.” ….‘We were at a teahouse, quite a polite place, and a woman pulled up in a four-by-four and Susan said, “you fucking disgusting bitch. Yes, you fucking disgusting gas-guzzling bitch” – yes, that’s what she said.’ …“The Oxford comma, do you know that? I amazed everybody with that. There was a place when it wasn’t grammatically correct and I said ‘yes, but it’s an Oxford comma, it can emphasise or clarify. Yes, and there’s an example with commas that makes Mandela look as though he’s an axemurderer or something.’” About the Author Rebecca May Johnson is a writer and journalist living and working in London. She will shortly submit her PhD thesis, which is an analysis of the contemporary epic Odyssey cycle, Niemands Frau (2007) by German poet Barbara Köhler. She is part of a collaborative group called Sitting Room that organises poetry readings in Sitting Rooms – among other things. January 21 st “She had a good arse, before arses were in fashion”, said a teenage girl to her friends. February 11 th “Healing without Freud or Prozac” by Dr David Servan-Schreiber lay beside her, while she read a large-format book on domestic bird care. February 26 th The Man from the Train (see post October 21, 2013) sits opposite, filling in all of the vowels in a passage he has written with a blue biro. Toddler’s singing group takes place on Wednesday and Friday mornings in the library’s main reading room. It lasts for over an hour. 31 4000 Holes #4 Gorilla in the Roses by Salome M. Sworn statement: “I’ll have to catch those monkey’s. A couple of darlings make no mistake.” The duties of the modern library worker extend beyond the care of books and the supervision of those with an eye on them into the realms of social workers, building inspectors, teachers and nurses to say the least. In 1962 people kept themselves upright in society and the kitchen sink hidden at home. The stamp of council property was sacrosanct and not to be violated. Thus it was a new avenue for the librarians then employed in the borough to be confronted with the mysterious disappearance of numerous books from the shelves, later rediscovered by innocent borrowers, scandalised by the obscene amendments found within. The noble efforts of Edith Cavell against the Nazis, reduced to servicing mammoth genitalia. A Dorothy L Sayers sleuth solving the case of Little Betty’s missing knickers in the station drawer of PC Brenda Coolidge, alongside a seven inch phallus. And the reckless defilement of nature itself – Tudor noblemen rendered with the heads of birds and a monkey supplanted in The Collins Guide To Roses! 1. Case Report: Malicious Damage Witness: Sidney Porrett, Borough legal clerk On closer inspection, the mystery was quickly narrowed to the suspicious conduct by the couple of young men frequently observed to be lurking amongst the shelves, the sole patrons deriving amusement from the reaction of the customers and efforts of placation and explanation on the part of the staff. The younger looking of the two has the glow of engagement in youthful mischief, though his companion in crime bears a darker shadow of miscreancy. Such grave and disgusting offences must be acted upon. Crime: Theft and defacement of council property with obscenity Scene of: Islington & Hampstead Libraries, various Date: Suspicions arose in 1962; evidence gathered indicates some previous 32 Sworn statement: “It wasn’t the Gibbon’s that started it really, that was just symptomatic of the whole thing. It reminds me of The Bible: ‘of the making of books there is no end’. Because there isn’t. Libraries might as well not exist; they’ve got endless shelves of rubbish and hardly any space for good books. You can obviously say when some things are rubbish and some things aren’t. I can obviously say Gibbons isn’t. He said a very funny thing about books: when the Arabs took Alexandria they used the contents of the library to provide fuel for the baths and Gibbon thought the books were doing more good being so used than they were being read.” 2. Case Report: The decline in standards of the public library It being a matter of good taste was a part of it, and my blurbs were only mildly obscene. In another way you could look at it as public benefaction, we steal, the shops buy more, the publishers are happy so in some way, we’re financing literature. Kenneth smuggled his out in a service gas mask case. I preferred a satchel. We wouldn’t watch each other but when we got home, I’d see what he took and he’d see mine, then we’d go to work. It was mostly a satirisation of the terribly popular pulp fiction and pedestrian mysteries, rewriting the blurbs to give them some real scandal. When we did take proper books, we’d always replace the author and the editor’s names back on the covers. How I see it, the real vandalism was the state of the collection as it was, not after we’d had it out. Witness: J. Orton, enraged borrower Crime: Absence on shelves of Gibbons’ Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire Scene of: Essex Road Library Date: Request unsatisfied in 1959; general poor stock selection long entrenched 33 Formally commenced in January on a suggestion from the police, with the drafting of library staff from beyond the branches, who may pass undetected as fellows among the borrowers and bear direct witness to the criminal acts. In more happily resourced times, this observation period lasted weeks to no avail before Sidney Porrett, Borough Legal Clerk asserted he ‘let my ethics slip a bit’ and ‘fetched myself down to their level’ by resorting to Typewriter Entrapment. Being possessed of the foresight at least to reckon the sort to commit such acts of depravity would unlikely be lured by a sweetened bait, Porrett sought to inflame their rage instead. The line was formed of an officious letter regarding the illegal deposit of an abandoned vehicle. Though wholly fabricated, the demonstration of such bureaucratic ineptitude could not go without a contemptuous response, typewritten in a face directly comparable to that in which the blurbs of mild obscenity were pasted. 3. Notes on an investigation At 9am on 28th April 1962 the police arrived at Flat 4, 25 Noel Road. They found the residence uniquely decorated with carefully pasted cut outs, collages delicately applied, a meticulous design on library wallpaper installed throughout the small rooms shared by the two, now held in deviant custody at Her Majesty’s Pleasure. 34 The senior probation officer identified their condition as that of the frustrated author, the behaviour an attempt to impose their literary artistry in lieu of an approving establishment and receptive audience. Giving no contrary account of their motives before the captive audience they did have at Old Street magistrates, both were expediently shipped on to Wormwood Scrubs. The use of any rationale they could have served, in overturning the prevailing and restrained morality of the time would be limited and this they likely knew. Perhaps some mitigation against the passing over of their theatrical moment was had in the thwarted desire of the prosecution, on behalf of the Borough, for financial compensation to be paid rather than a custodial sentence. They also gained that celebrated status as cover stars of the Daily Mirror. After undergoing assessment by the prison psychiatrist their paths began to diverge. Kenneth Halliwell, the shadowed miscreant told the truth; Orton, the mischievous did not. They were soon despatched to different palaces in the Queen’s penitentiary estate, exposing deep contrasts in their individual resiliencies. This division remained in the years after their release and though they died together in August 1967, there was little chance of reconciliation in the dying of the light or eternal peace. Kenneth bludgeoned Joe with a hammer before overdosing on pills. 4. Judgement Magistrate being a dirty word between them, the judgment for which they may have had more respect is that of aesthetics. Some vindication then, in the exhibition celebrating their works, held at the same scene of the crime, 49 years later. Judgement Judgement Judgement Judgement “And so the god’s distinction grew Judgement Judgement Good luck to art, a sod to you” Inspired by and with quotation from Prick Up Your Ears: The Biography of Joe Orton, by John Lahr ©. Images of defaced covers: Owned by Islington Local History Centre, Islington Borough Council 35 Call For Submissions Issue #7 Theme: Folklore Wars: Competing Narratives We welcome submissions to our flash fiction section (500 word limit) on the theme of ‘Folklore Wars: Competing Narratives’. The deadline for submissions is 31st March 2016, with a view to publish in April. Read the submission guidelines at peardrop.net/submit. Themed and non-themed submissions also welcome for all other sections. Send your contributions to info@peardrop.net. www.peardrop.net www.facebook.com/peardroppress www.twitter.com/peardroppress 36
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