Walking Around Thoughts: Little Library Freedom Ain’t Free
Everything is simultaneous now; it all happens everywhere at once.
Thus, a police department in Bloomington, Minnesota announces online that they will be donating books after a series of thefts from ‘Little Free Libraries’ in their town, and, within hours, they have been mocked by readers around the world who emphasize the “Free” nature of the donations made through these community book kiosks. Something of a cross between a mailbox and a bird feeder, a ‘Little Free Library’ is a donation hub where neighbors are encouraged to “leave or take” books. Contrary to a popular misconception, one does not have to leave a book in order to take a book. Nor are they expected to return the book after reading it, as Newsweek reported.
The Little Free Library organization was started in Hudson, Wisconsin, in 2009 by an entrepreneur and former teacher named Todd Bol, as a tribute to his mother, and is now a global nonprofit with over 75,000 “public bookcases” in 88 countries. A volunteer “steward” sets up and maintains each library; in order to register a kiosk with the organization, it costs about $40. If you would like a library kit, rather than building your own, it will cost you $320, but comes pre-registered. Police protection is not included.
Nevertheless, as the Bloomington police responded to their critics, the issue in this case was an individual who was taking all of the books in order to sell them, something that goes against the “intent” of the boxes. It was unclear what detective work led them to this chilling conclusion, or who first called the police to report the theft of donated goods. Apparently, however, this is not an uncommon problem with many local news stations reporting on many a suspicious individual taking too many books, such that one “can only assume he’s sellling them.”
I’ve been thinking about this problem while walking around Hamilton, Ontario, where I live. Previously, I was blithely unaware of this particular issue, basically taking and leaving books willy nilly. I am well familiar with the kiosks however- during my regular walk home from work, I pass three ‘Little Free Libraries’; on my weekly walk to a friend’s bookshop, I pass five more. I’ve now noticed that one of them bears the “video surveillance” sticker photographed, apparently in order to deter this type of criminal activity. It is located in what I’ve heard been described as a “bad neighborhood,” or, at least, one with many such stickers.
Nevertheless, worrying about who takes books from a ‘Little Free Library,’ and why they do so, strikes me as a bit petty. No doubt, there are people who sell these books to used bookstores; yet, if this is an unethical act, it seems about on the order of pawning a birthday present.
In the interest of full disclosure, I should also mention that I have committed this crime: there was a time in my life that I was sufficiently poor to be living in my car and working a few shifts a week as a dishwasher; at this time, I often sold books I’d taken from Little Free Libraries through a friend’s store, although I always read them first. It never would have occurred to me that this was a vice. If it goes against the spirit of these book shelves, well, so does accusing someone of “stealing” a free donation.
It’s also, I think, on the order of two related phenomena:
- The increased surveillance of public spaces and behaviors, and
- The attribution or denial of spiritual or existential qualities to marginalized populations based on socioeconomic criteria.
“Marginalization” is perhaps too strong a word here- it sounds like some official bureaucratic policy of exclusion. Nevertheless, we can probably agree that social conformity is fairly commonplace and those individuals who are seen as somehow nonconforming will be isolated and treated as suspicious. In addition, the basic division of labor creates differing mores and norms, and essentially different cultures. People with all sorts of varying values live side by side; yet, Society must be defended! But from what part of society? We have to create “others” in the absence of clear and distinct others. Anecdotally, I would say this is the most outwardly conformist era I can remember living through.
Nevertheless, there is an imaginative aspect to marginalization. At least, it takes a great act of imagination to watch one person taking a handful of free books and assume they will be read and cherished, while another person is stealing them to turn a profit. Anyone who has been the target of that imagination has right to bristle. But, living in a city with wide disparities, I am often struck by how creative people can be in attributing spiritual qualities to others based on purely aesthetic criteria.
I had a landlord, for instance, who could have been a novelist in his flights of fancy about the less-privileged locals where we lived. The power would go out and he’d exclaim “One of those Hamilton people must’ve gotten drunk and driven into an electric pole!” My cat would sneak out and he’d warn not to put up a lost cat sign: “One of those people will catch him and demand a five hundred dollar ransom!” A nearby store would close and he’d say: “They must’ve been robbed too many times by the locals!” It was a little odd.
Not uncommon though; a former in-law of mine, and a somewhat militant athiest, imagined the less-privileged in this area to be fanatical religious zealots. At a nearby pharmacy, they will actually follow me to the hygiene aisle and watch me shop, presumably in case I were to steal soap and shaving cream. A local affordable apartment complex allows monthly room searches to be carried out by a private company made up of former police officers, who can supposedly sniff out “signs of hoarding, drug use, and prostitution.” One wonders what items in a woman’s apartment would be taken as signs of inappropriate sexual activity.
I suppose there is some emotional need satisfied when we attribute virtues or vices onto other populations- perhaps it’s a guilty conscience. The poor are in a strange position: required for society to function, but not full partners. There are barriers to their becoming full partners, including the overpoliciing, and some of these barriers are psychological.
Thomas Moore talks about this in Utopia (1516), accusing his society at one point: “You create thieves, and then punish them for stealing!” One inspiration for writing the work was Moore’s belief that the death penalty- a not-uncommon punishment for stealing in 16th century Europe- was unjust. What would be just? It must depend on the item stolen. And it must depend on the thief. A poor man who steals a muffin should be treated less harshly than a rich man who steals a pension fund. Hardly anyone thinks Jean Valjean was treated justly for stealing bread.
Is this what makes a measure “petty” — its disproportionality? Not exactly. To my mind, a punishment seems petty if it is: cruel, unwarranted, and minor. It would not be “petty” to cut off a hand for stealing; it would be an injustice. A convenience store posting a picture of a thief in their window is not “petty” because we generally agree it’s proportional. Were they to post a picture of the thief with their pants down, this might seem petty.
Moore’s solution to the problem of stealing in Utopia was to do away with private property altogther. Similarly, Jean-Jacques Rousseau thought that private property was the ultimate source of inequality. People criticize Rousseau all the time and unfairly it seems to me. The idea that inequality stems from private property was really a commonplace of the 18th century, particularly in religious thought. We associate it with Communism, and see private property as sacrosanct, but obviously Rousseau would not have. He was also familiar with all of the levels of his society, something uncommon among philosphes.
Lending libraries began among the lumières who could afford them. Public libraries, though, are a product of Victorian era moralism, a belief that we should broaden the cultural horizons of the laboring poor who maintain industrial capitalism. They probably stem from some of the same concerns that drove Marx, but are essentially rooted in philanthropy. Nevertheless, after the rise of the Great Society programs of the last century, community projects like little libraries and free book kiosks might have fallen uncomfortably outside of the aegis of the state or church or capital. Little free libraries might even seem vaguely communist- from each writer according to his ability, to each reader according to his needs!
Free books are basically community property, and maybe it’s the books we’re have suspicions about here. Or, perhaps, cultures based in private property simply don’t handle the notion of community property very well. Who, after all, will steward the book stewards?
I know what used book stores offer for used books and if someone needs that little bit of money so badly…Report
Yeah, that was my thought- if someone hasn’t been in the situation that this seemed like their best option, their opinion really doesn’t interest me.
It also reminded me of a neighboring town that passed a law that made it illegal to “steal” from people’s recycling bins- because certain cans fetch a 5 cent deposit.Report
Lots of cities do that, because their recycling program depends on capturing those deposits themselves.
It’s also illegal in a lot of places to “steal” from people’s trash, but that’s actually a nice bit of privacy law.Report
I’m not sure exactly how it works here. Usually, you can put the recycling out once a week and get nada, OR if it’s beer cans and beer bottles, you can bring them to the “Beer Store” and get the 20 cents or whatever it is. I suspect it depends on how much you drink or how lazy you are. At any rate, when I walk to work in the morning, I often see the guys with trailers behind their bikes collecting dozens of beer cans. I think it’s still legal in this city to go through the recycling boxes that have been left out. Or, at least, no one seems to care.Report
I live near The Last Bookstore here in Los Angeles
https://www.lastbookstorela.com/
and in fact, was a major consideration in choosing my location. It is a wonderful place that buys and sells used books, as well as new with art galleries upstairs.
What is striking when I browse through the store is just how prolific our book industry is, similar to the garment industry.
Our society produces so many books of so many varieties that a used book has almost no monetary value.
Some of that the bookstore sells are magnificent coffee table art books in the $20 range, but the bulk of them- pulp novels, history books, literature- are sold for one dollar. Even for good quality used books, they offer the seller maybe five dollars at most since they need to mark them up.
So yeah, the idea of “book thieves” strikes me as a bit…fanciful.Report
That’s what I found fascinating- I would never think to attribute that to anyone. I mean I’ve seen homeless guys take an armful of books and the first thing that goes through my head is, of course, they would have a lot of time to read and it’s a good escape.
But, running a google search brought up scores of news stories about this apparent worldwide crime wave.Report
My evil use of the Little Free Library would be to dump books I don’t want to take with me next time I move. They are not easy to dispose of.Report
I have friends with a bookstore that has new and used sections- probably one in ten of the used books were mine. I was surprised to find they were asked most often about classics, particularly in philosophy. The young people are interested in them and find them hard to come by, and the older ones are looking to recover books they got rid of in various moves!Report
For experimental purposes, could you identify one such classic for me? Thanks in advance…Report
Some of them I wasn’t surprised by, like ‘On the Road,’ that remain popular with young people. But, according to my bookstore owning friends, the college students get assigned those collections of excerpts for philosophy courses, but are actually then interested in having the complete book for their library. So, something like Kant’s Critique of Judgment or Hobbes’ Leviathan, ,that I found in cheap copies 20 years ago, they could sell pretty easily. Most of those books, if I want to reread them, I’ll just look on the Internet Archive or Google Books.Report
When I was about 10, I actually lived that scene in the Simpsons.
I found a copy of Wm. Burroughs’ Naked Lunch in my older brother’s bedroom and naturally assumed it was a forbidden delight.
After a disappointing afternoon of flipping through, I was able to name many more than two things wrong with that title!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lCdM6ss5sloReport
It’s funny- thinking back, it was a friend in high school who did a lot of drugs and told me that book would blow my mind or whatever. But I had a big crush on her, so I probably read it thinking it was going to be sexy as well, only to get to… what it is.Report
I couldn’t figure out where they fit in this, but I did come across two other criticisms of Little Free Libraries: 1. On occasion, neo-nazis have filled them with their literature, which seems pretty easily rectified, and 2. A few people associate them with gentrification- if you see a new one in a low-income area, rents will go up soon. To my mind, this seems to come from the same depressing notion that poor people don’t want to read. At the least, surely stronger rent control laws would work better than denying certain neighborhoods cultural amenities.Report
I live in an area that’s solidly middle, probably even lower middle, class, and I can think of 2 within a couple minutes’ walk. Books know no class.Report
As far as I can tell, the cops aren’t going after little library “thieves” and no one is proposing prosecuting them. My guess, though I’ll defer to Minnesota criminal lawyers, is that emptying out a little library and making a few pitiful bucks selling the contents is not a crime.What happened here is that the local cops donated a bunch of books to the (probably legally) despoiled little libraries.
This was a nice thing to do.
Do people have so little going on in their own lives that twitter mobs have to jump on something like this?Report
Yes, I found that amusing as well. My guess is what happened is the steward saw someone taking “too many” books, contacted the police, and they figured it would be cute to clean out their used books and donate, and Twitter responded as it customarily does.Report
One word; just one small word: Twitter.Report
I was at the University of Michigan decades ago when some group, to much fan fair, unleashed “green bikes” on the world. Stripped of the happy talk they were unowned community bikes.
They instantly disappeared. I’m not sure what happened, taken into private ownership and/or sold for scrap metal maybe.Report
My school did something similar (red bikes), and if it wasn’t bikes vanishing, it was complaints of the bikes being left helter skelter across sidewalks, parking lots, and driveways.Report
This is exactly what would happen here. It’s another topic I’d like to learn more about- we have a large bike-riding indigent population in this city, and it’s extremely hard to own a bike and not have it stolen, even with good locks. As far as I can tell, you pretty much have to bring them into buildings with you. But you constantly hear stories about bike theives and stolen bikes.
We do have community bikes that you rent with your credit card and that seems to work better- I guess they must have gps. The problem there was they were “sponsored” by Uber, the world’s largest Ponzi scheme, who backed out, and then they had to scramble to find support- which is weird because you do rent the bikes.
Anyway, there’s probably a book there. But bike thieves are already the subject of one of the all-time great movies:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H2P4xo9kmPMReport
I wonder if someone could contact those bicycle thieves and ask them to apply their expertise to all those scooters I keep tripping over on our sidewalks.
I would be willing to give them some sort of bounty for the service.Report
Interesting thought on whether private property societies struggle with the idea of communal property. It seems to me that for communal property to work the way it’s supposed to there also needs to be a very strong sense of communal responsibility. Obviously the stakes are incredibly low with the little free library. But anyone whose ever had that roommate that left the bathroom in a horrific state knows how it can play out. I can only imagine sharing something like a car. If everyone is responsible then no one is responsible.
One thing I’ve come to believe is that Western society, and American society in particular, puts a lot of value in defection and freedom to defect. There are times that actually works really well for us. It also means that there are some nice things we just can’t have.Report
“One thing I’ve come to believe is that Western society, and American society in particular, puts a lot of value in defection and freedom to defect. There are times that actually works really well for us. It also means that there are some nice things we just can’t have.”
This is an interesting point. America does seem to put a stronger emphasis on that value. Remember that Canada was founded to a large extent by United Empire Loyalists, who defined themselves by *not* defecting. I’ve noticed a somewhat stronger emphasis on social cohesion. But people here also tend to take a live and let live attitude that allows for a decent amount of internal defection.
But all societies have subgroups that aren’t quite assimilable. I wonder how Little Free Libraries would work in say, Bulgaria. Would the locals assume the Romany were stealing books?
I suppose the problem societies will run into is when it becomes increasingly unclear how one would buy in, if they wanted to. I can say it was certainly clearer to my grandparents than it is to me.Report
Welcome to EVERY debate about the Tragedy of the Commons in natural resource management and protection.Report
My understanding, based on perusing the Little Free Library web site, is that the idea is that people donate books in order to give people who can’t easily afford books access to free books to read. The whole thing is premised on the idea that poor people do like to read.
If what actually happens is that one person grabs all the books, carts them off to a used book store—dumping the unsellable ones in the trash—and now people who actually want to read them have to pay at a considerable markup, this goal is frustrated. If the donors had wanted to sell the books to a used book store and give the money to charity, they would have done that.
But I don’t know. I guess if people are just using them as dumping grounds for books they don’t want, it doesn’t matter.
Regardless, the real moral of the story, as always, is that Twitter Trash are the worst.Report
Yeah, definitely. In case it’s not clear from my post, I think the Little Free Library organization is a pure good for humanity and I’m glad they exist and that people pass along books. I also think there are random individuals who don’t fully grasp the concept, which strikes me as amusing and interesting.
As for the worst dregs of Twitter… well, I certainly agree on that point!Report
I am often struck by how creative people can be in attributing spiritual qualities to others based on purely aesthetic criteria.
If I wanted to make a moral judgment and the only information I had was aesthetic, I’d probably lean pretty heavily on stuff like individual choices for how one presents oneself inbetween denials of physiognomy being real.
Sigh.
Collective action is a bear, though. Especially when nobody knows each other anymore.Report
Absolutely. I sort of wonder if religious people can manage it easier because they assume that God knows you, even if they don’t. (Of course, the issue there is they’re always trying to complete the sale.)Report
Moral judgements about the poor is a problem because it makes it harder to not be poor.
It’s also a problem because there’s a HARD nugget of truth in there. Dysfunctional behavior (addiction, mental illness, bad cultural habits) tend to make you poor.Report
Or keep you poor anyway. Many people who are born poor will die poor, and certainly part of that is their having learned to play the role. Some of that might be watching their parents, but I have a feeling that, even with the ideal role models, it’s still hard to escape internalized classism. I see it in myself- a tendency towards a type of fatalism and projected insecurity that I try to ward off as much as possible, because it’s no good for getting things done!Report
Oh, there was a book that came out a while back that talked about this.
Each class has a system of rewards for staying and punishments for trying to leave. (And “leaving” was defined as “acting like you were from a different one”.)
It’s rewarding to stay where you are. And you’ll be punished if you try to change.Report
One of the things that wealth purchases is the freedom to risk and fail without consequence and make decisions that, only in hindsight, are good decisions.
We all know the stories of the plucky and clever inventors tinkering in their garage (while being supported by the hard work of others), making shrewd and wise decisions which resulted in success.
Less known are the million others whose tinkering resulted in failure, or the millions who were not able to risk because they needed to husband their resources.
“Good decisions” are often only “good” because they were combined with luck- of being in the right place at the right time or having the right social connections.
There are probably millions of people out there who squandered the family savings on an online bookselling platform, or point and click user interface, or whatever, but because the venture failed, their decision and resultant poverty is looked at as an example of foolish spendthiftery.
On the converse, people who in the 1990s made the good decision to pay the rent and contribute to their retirement account, rather than invest in some foolish startup called Amazon.
Our view of success is often warped by some sort of survivor bias; We assume that good and bad decisions are obvious when they never really are, and maybe we prefer to ignore the frightening thought of just how much of our lives is determined by random chance.Report
You’re drastically over valuing “random chance”. Yes, to be Bill Gates everything has to go right, this includes a lot of luck. However part of that “everything” is not doing stupid things or self destructive things and a huge amount of risk and work.
Much more importantly, it is possible, even easy, to be successful without winning a start-up lottery. My eldest didn’t just wake up one morning and find she’d accidently become a software engineer with a great job.
I’m one of the millions of people who failed to make his start up work. I lost a lot of money doing so. For two years I was technically poor, I’m not now. I just work for Fortune 500s nowdays.Report
I would say most of us are much more willing to assign random chance to the setbacks in our lives than the things that went right.
I would say another factor that gets overlooked is sheer chutzpah. I’ve known plenty of poor creative types with great ideas who needed to be kicked in the butt to share those ideas with others. It was really hard to explain “fake it ’till you make it” to a few of my friends for example.Report
To get a job from any specific interview requires a fair amount of luck.
If you can keep going on interviews until you get a job? That’s not luck.Report
Like I said, at a certain point, sheer chutzpah helps a lot. There’s an essay where Kurt Vonnegut talks about teaching creative writing and says that every class has a few who could be professional writers, but most won’t, and the ones who do are just insistent that everyone has to read their work, even if nobody wants to at the moment.Report
What percentage of the outcome of our life is skill versus luck? I don’t suppose there is any way to know, really.
But in the same way that the ancient philosophers would advice to “memento mori” or that “All glory is fleeting”, its good for us to keep in mind our own mortality and frailty.
You and I and everyone here is much much closer to the guy sleeping in a doorway than we are to a Jeff Bezos and I mean, a LOT closer, like most everyone would be stunned to realize how precarious our hold on our world is.Report
Like I said, sheer chutzpah plays a bigger role than we think. I remember a musician once being asked how his band “made it” in music and he said: Well, we just didn’t stop. If we stopped touring around playing music, my only other skill is delivering pizzas, so we just never stopped.Report
I still remember a sermon given back in the 1980’s by my Southern Babtist minister. Well, not the sermon, per se. The poem he read in the middle of the sermon.
Now, of course, “moral luck” is one of the hardest pills to swallow and it’s one that we all need to.
But.
I have had friends who gave up early. I have had friends who kept at it no matter what.
And some of the friends who tended to give up early did well. And not every friend who kept at it no matter what got his due.
But, all things being equal, the group of friends who kept at it no matter what got further than the ones who tended to give up early.Report
As with the novel “Naked Lunch”, a Baptist sermon that begins with “Two gay young frogs” didn’t live up to its initial promise.Report
For me to be Bezos would have happened if my company had worked.
If we’d stumbled on a solid trading algo (i.e. if the research had been successful) we would have had a license to print money. Or alternatively, if we’d started two-three years earlier with our existing strats.
For me to be sleeping in a doorway requires me to be someone else. Me-but-insane would do it. I’m not sure to what degree serious addiction would do it because that requires me to not do anything to fix myself.
This year I’ve lost my job again. This year I’ve had to go interviewing. The first several times I interviewed didn’t go well. I had to re-invent my skills yet again.
There are certainly elements of luck to all this, however there are also large amounts of “successful behavior creates success at some point”.
Luck plays a huge roll in who specifically gets Covid. Taking the vaccine is not luck and helps a lot.Report
In regards to what Chip said before about most of us being closer to sleeping in doorways than we realize, I think of something my former father-in-law said. My ex had some fairly severe mental illnesses, but she was also born to wealthy parents and got very good care. It probably could have gone either way. I remember her father, who was a CFO at Deloitte, giving generously to panhandlers, and when I said something about it, saying “That could have easily been my daughter, if she had a different family.”Report
That’s basically my ex-sister-in-law too. IMHO without other people’s money she’d be homeless because she’s not functional enough to have a job.
I’ve known a few others like that over the years. Some got a bad roll of the genetic dice, some picked their parents poorly and imho were abused into mental illness. A few fried their minds on some substance.
IMHO they had reduced odds of life success and increased odds of homelessness.
That implies the reverse too, that you play some role in your successes.Report
Yeah… there’s the other thing too though, where people are functional themselves, but wind up adjacent to someone who goes off the rails.
I think we’ve all had a small version of that where a friend or lover changes so drastically that we have to ditch them to keep our own sanity. It’s sort of unavoidable sometimes.
Now, imagine it’s someone you’re living with or a parent or even a spouse… I’ve met more than a few people who fled abusive relationships because they had to choose survival over shelter.
In my own case, it wasn’t far from that. The only advantage was I saw it coming well enough in advance that I made friends who had couches to sleep on, and found a few shit-jobs to get my footing. But, staying in that situation was NOT an option.
I mean, maybe it *was* a bad decision to marry and move to Canada, but all I can say is the person I was with for seven years was not the person I had to leave at 1 a.m. in a snowstorm.
So, I don’t know- having friends you can call in an emergency is a godsend, and hopefully I’ve been the same for a few people.Report