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From time to time, I've thought to myself I'd like to find more sports-related books for my children.

Today I opened a care package from my mother. Inside, were the usual niceties she likes to send: activity books for the kids, some little notepads and stickers, some coupons and...a book.

The book was called Winning. A Novel by Robin Brancato.

This book looked familiar to me.  I thought, 'Oh, my parents must have found one of my old books up in the attic, and decided to include it in the care package.'

Well, yes and no.  It was one of my old books. Inside, was the elaborate scrawl that I used to sign my books with, along with the date I had acquired it. April 9, 1988.  In the corner someone had penciled $3.00, so it was clearly bought second-hand from my local Wynnefield Library book sale (remember, the most beautiful library in the world)

I don't know why I had picked it up as a teenager, actually, since I never really liked sports-themed books.
As it turned out, though, Winning is the story of a young football player whose life is turned upside down by tragedy, so not a typical sports story at all.  Although I only read this one once, it was an extremely compelling read.

But when I left home to go to graduate school in 1993, I remember giving away a bunch of my old books to a local Goodwill, a few towns away from my parent's house in Philadelphia. Winning was one of those books.

In the note I received today, my mother wrote: "We found this book in the Overbrook Train Station Book Swap." The Overbrook train station is just a few blocks from my parent's home in Philadelphia.


So,  almost exactly TWENTY YEARS LATER, the book returned to my parents, and they returned it to me.  Where has the book been for twenty years?  I'll never know.

I do know I will save it for my children to read--I don't think they would have ever read this amazing story otherwise.

But maybe this is just a reminder that sometimes when you throw a question to the universe, you never know how you'll be answered...and perhaps that's the fun of it.


What do you think? Have you ever tossed a question to the universe and seen it answered in strange ways?


 
 
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Wynnefield Library
Anyone who knows me, knows I love libraries.  If I have a few hours to myself, then I'll often find a library (or a coffee shop, these days) to read, write, think.

And during my life, I've certainly had the opportunity to visit some beautiful and impressive libraries--Trinity College Library (Dublin), the British Library (London), the Oxford Library, the Biblioteque Nationale (Paris), the Newberry Library (Chicago), the Free Library of Philadelphia (main branch)...to name a few.  And certainly, I live near some lovely libraries now in Highland Park and Lake Forest (Illinois).

But for me, the most beautiful library in the world is the Wynnefield Library, a branch of the Free Library of Philadelphia, located just a few blocks from where I grew up in West Philly.  It's not fancy, it's not glamorous--in fact, the modest 1960s exterior has a lot to be desired visually. A gently flowering tree gracing the red brick walls might look to be the library's only beauty. Certainly, no Baroque drama, no Georgian curves here, not even a whit of Victorian indulgence to be found.

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Posters like these urged kids to read
The interior is equally simple.  If I'm remembering correctly, a main circulation desk greets you when you enter, and just after,  the young adult section. Beyond that lay the Adult Reading Room. (I only ventured in there looking for my mother, usually finding her in the mystery stacks. To this day, I'm fairly certain that the area would still feel off-limits to me).

To the left, the children's area awaited.

There, the children's librarians (especially dear Ms. Naismith) knew our names, often greeting us with recommendations and new readings to share. As an inner-city regional branch, I can only imagine now how limited the holdings must have been, how few the copies of popular books,  and how few new books ever went into circulation.

Yet, I can remember leaving most days with one, two, three, even up to the maximum twelve books we were allowed to check out on a given day. (Thank goodness it wasn't twelve books total, especially with my--ahem--terrible allergy to returning books on time! I'd never get anything new.) The books were much-handled, many were stained,  but I don't remember ever minding their careworn pages.

The library brought us together in ways I can scarcely make sense of now. The librarians didn't just read us stories; they helped us form book clubs, let us put on plays, and stimulated our curiosity in new worlds.

I remembering saying to a librarian once I couldn't find any more good books.  She promptly introduced me to Tamara, a girl who lived near me, but whom I'd never met.  Tamara in turn introduced me to Louisa May Alcott. Without this introduction, I might never have discovered one of my all-time favorite authors, or found a new friend.

Clearly, the librarians simply loved reading, just as we did, and shared that love of reading with us.  We weren't just "patrons" to them (or worse, kids to be ignored). The librarians viewed us as what we were: individuals, thinkers, and above all else, readers.

The Wynnefield Library may not have had much, but in its beautiful humble way, it sustained and nourished a community.

What do you think? What's the most beautiful library?