We feel that librarians may congratulate themselves upon the growing sureness of the position of the Library in the life of the community. One of the legacies of the Great War, or, at any rate, one of the conditions clearly discernible in post‐war days, is an increased intellectual inquisitiveness in the people. There have been those who prophesied that first the Cinema, and then Wireless, would tend to reduce the use of books, even to the vanishing point. No prophesy has been more false. Either the nation's mental appetite has absorbed these new things and like Oliver Twist wants “more,” or these things themselves have been incitements to further reading. The cause is obscure, but the facts are plain enough, and these prove that in every town where the library provision is reasonably adequate, the increase in the issue of books is little less than phenomenal.
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Review Article|
January 01 1926
The Library World Volume 28 Issue 7 Available to Purchase
Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 2977-7267
Print ISSN: 0024-2616
© MCB UP Limited
1926
The Library World (1926) 28 (7): 136–160.
Citation
(1926), "The Library World Volume 28 Issue 7". The Library World, Vol. 28 No. 7 pp. 136–160, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/eb009100
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