Search for a book
I’ve been searching for Iraj Pezeshkzad’s My Uncle Napoleon, the novel that made “going to San Francisco” a euphemism for sex in Farsi, for almost a year now. The San Francisco Public Library doesn’t have it, and none of the respectable booksellers with People Who Know About Books at the counters have been able to find it either. I was even sent over to abebooks.com to search the vast network of independent booksellers for the book I want.
So today, on a whim, I entered “Iraj Pezeshkzad” into a form on Amazon.com and poof Amazon says a copy will be shipped out by January second, and even offered me Persepolis: The Story of a Childhood as an upsell.
I remember when knowing about and being able to find slightly obscure items was the mark of a good retail salesperson, when a request for a book that the regular distributors don’t have was a challenge, when a record store in the suburbs would have a person who, when faced with someone buying a Conrad Schnitzler album, would ask if that person would be interested in hearing something by Wolf Sequenza.
Well, too bad. Amazon can have my business. If a computer can do a better job than a humanâa better job than the humans in one of the best cities for booksellersâof finding books, then the book-shop has truly become nothing other than a book-store.
Did you try interlibrary
Did you try interlibrary loan? You can get almost anything your local library doesn’t own.
No, I used the SFPL’s search
No, I used the SFPL’s search function of their electronic card catalogue. That tells me of there’s anything in any of the San Francisco branches, but nothing outside SF.
How do I find out if it’s available in another city? (Without checking each city individually, that is)
The frustrating thing is that the translation I ordered is only four or five years old; I can’t imagine that the People Who Know About Books at SF’s snottiest booksellers actually tried very hard to find it for me.
To get a book through
To get a book through interlibrary loan, you need to talk to a librarian. They’ll have some form for you to fill out (i.e. title, author, and any other info you know) and they might charge a small fee. In Berkeley it’s $2, in Oakland it’s 50 cents, but I don’t know what it is in SF. Then the ILL librarian scours all the libraries in the world to find your book and have them ship to them. When it comes in, your local library will contact you to let you know it has arrived. Then you can go borrow it from the library. The drawback to this is that you have to wait for the library that owns the book to ship it to your library. But the turn around time is generally reasonable, provided that you don’t need the book that very day. Also, by requesting it, the collections development librarian can see that people want that book and may end up purchasing it for the collection.
Librarians are very helpful in trying to track down a book you’re looking for. You can even play the I‑don’t-remember-the-title-or-author-but-it’s-about-this game with them. They’ll try their darndest to get you what you’re looking for. At least they are supposed to; that’s their job. (The librarian’s job, that is. Not the the library assistant’s.)
Since when is San Francisco
Since when is San Francisco one of the best cities for booksellers?
I know of one good non-chain store in that town, Green Apple.
For the 14 years that I lived there, it was always a source of great amazement to me that a city with such a population of artistic intellectual people would have such a shitty complement of bookstores.
Can’t be blamed on the rise of the megastores, either, because it goes back to before that.
Maybe it’s like the mayor thing. S.F. is a wonderful city packed with politically-aware liberals, forever doomed to have shitty mayors.
How’s the new guy, Newsom, is it?