(7/20/2021)
Author Freya Sampson introduces the reader to a wide variety of interesting townspeople whose stories are compelling and together create a colorful and vibrant backdrop for the drama that unfolds in the English village of Chalcot. It is the local library, however, that takes center stage and captures our imagination and respect as it faces closure due to upcoming budget cuts. Through detailed, description, flashbacks to previous times and patrons' memories of the many ways the library has served them, one is transported to a setting that is familiar to all who have grown up with a library near-by. Efforts to petition, protest and convince the village council of the value of the library are enthusiastic and heartfelt even when not effective. This will be an enjoyable read for anyone who has fought to save a beloved institution and for anyone who can smell, feel and savor the ambience of a library. In remarks to the council, the assistant librarian says, "Libraries are places where everyone, rich or poor, wherever they come from in the world can feel safe. Where they can access information that will empower them...A mobile library might still provide books, but it can never be the heart of the community." Amen!