Once Upon a Loud Librarian
5019

Mr. Johnson has been the librarian for as long as I can remember. He is your typical librarian, only much stricter. My library, the Takoma Branch Library, is so quiet that you can hear a pin drop. Mr. Johnson doesn’t let anyone make noise, not even in the kids’ section. If you’re wearing sneakers, you’ve got to be careful not to let your sneakers squeak on the floor or you’ll get a very stern warning look (more of a hateful glare, really) from Mr. Johnson. I’m not sure what he’d do to you if they keep squeaking because no one I know has ever tried to find out. To tell you the truth, Takoma Branch Library sometimes makes me so nervous that I’m afraid to move or sneeze.

One day, Mr. Johnson announced that he was retiring and that the Takoma Branch Library had hired a new librarian called Mrs. Watkins to take his place. When I ask him about it, Mr. Johnson just pursed his lips and narrowed his eyes, but stayed silent. He did not look pleased.

I went to the library on Mrs. Watkins’s first day and immediately noticed a change. The library looked the same, but I thought I heard a noise. I thought I heard people talking. I was shocked and followed my ears to the source of the noise—it was a woman who stood next to the librarian’s desk talking to a man. She was LOUD and I was scared that she’d get in a lot of trouble from the new librarian.

“Excuse me,” I whispered, “you’re talking very loudly and I don’t want you to get in trouble with the new librarian.”

The woman smiled at me and said, “I am the new librarian and I don’t plan to get myself in trouble. Do you?”

“No… but…” I stammered.

“Learning is a loud business, honey,” she stated. “You’ll see—we’re going to make some changes around here. Learning and reading can be silent affairs, but they’re much more fun if they aren’t!”

And just like that, things begin to change. I first noticed it in the kids’ section. Mostly, I noticed that the kids were making a bit of noise. Then one day, I heard screeching and roaring. It was Mrs. Watkins reading a book during storybook hour and was acting out the parts of the book. The little kids were eating it up! They were screeching and roaring along with her.

This is going to scare people away, I thought. Who wants to come to a loud library? Well, it turns out that I was wrong.

Next time I went to the library, there was a lot of noise in the adult section. Mrs. Watkins was leading a book group. I’m not sure what that is, exactly. But I saw a lot of adults sitting in a circle. They were all holding the same book and arguing. Only, they didn’t look mad at each other, they looked excited and happy.

The next time I went to the library, it was packed. There were still quiet corners. But mostly I heard noise and conversations. In the big kids’ section, Mrs. Watkins had set up an experiment. She said that she read about this experiment in a book and had to try it out. First she read us the book. It was pretty cool. It was about making a rocket out of a soda bottle. She let a few of us help her. Soon, we had everything set up. We started the rocket and it flew to the ceiling. Everybody cheered and whooped with joy. But no one cheered or whooped louder than Mrs. Watkins. That is when I understood what she meant. You can learn quietly. But reading and learning is much more fun when you can make noise!