19 Jan 2012
That is Anna Centenary Library for the non-Tamil.
(Pic source: Wikipedia)
I wasn’t going to leave Chennai without visiting this library. So on a rainy day, I booked a cab and landed in Koturpuram with the children in tow. Totally sigh worthy place. Beautifully conceptualized and constructed and can give any US library a tough competition. Note ‘CAN’ is the keyword here.
Management and administration needs a lot of fine tuning. As a visitor one gets contradicting information regarding what to carry inside, what to leave in the car. We were asked to leave our purses and carry just our cellphones in to the building, very surprising considering that majority of the population arrives in bus or by walk! After we crossed the lobby we found ourselves in front of the coffee shop without our purse. When asked the security told me, ‘Madam you must have put some rupee notes in your pant pocket’. For which my response was, ‘What if I am not wearing pants or pants without pockets?’ and I instantly regretted it! Thankfully the lady replied, ‘Most of them who come here wear pants’ instead of, ‘Inside your bra, like women did in good old days’.
The children’s section was the only section I visited. If I had more time I would have checked out the manuscripts section also. The library is not yet set up for checking out books. They have OPAC set up only through intranet, which means the catalog can only be accessed from the within the library.
I searched the catalog through the computer and was delighted to find many of my favorites showing up. The initial purchase was 70,000 books, I was told. No one knew if they will be buying more books and who is in charge of it. But the classification and arrangement was very confusing for me. They follow Dewey Decimal Classification for shelving, but when it comes to the end user, DDC must be transparent, IMO. Also the number of staff are simply not enough to check inventory and shelve the books for the number of visitors. End result chaos, fiction picture books and non-fiction chapter books shelved next to each other, tables heaped with books, one whole section of the library piled with books pulled out by children and cordoned off to be shelved later(which was after the winter break and school reopen I was told by the staff!).
Hopefully we don’t grow complacent that we have South India’s largest library and neglect the upkeep, if the library stays as a library, that is!
6 Responses for "Anna Nootrandu Noolagam"
but even with the DDC, shouldnt there be a librarian to help out to pick up the books..because as far as I know, not too many people are aware of the DDC or as a matter of fact, any other classification system followed in these big libraries
Keep bags outside carrying only cell phones…thats a weird logic!
Thanks for the review…I am surely going there in the next Madras visit
UTBT SAYS: There are 8 librarians working in two shifts. But on a normal day, they say that they get 300 children visiting. Even if every child pulls out 10 books, that is 3000 books to be shelved by 4 librarians. Uphill task. Assuming every book is in its place, one can atleast fight to decipher the DDC and locate it. Since that is not the case, they are lying in piles on the floor and on tables and they do not have generic place cards either by author’s name or by fiction/nonfiction/picture books….it was as if one has to stumble upon a book and then decide to read it or not.
Wait a minute..you have been to chennai yet you never informed any of us,chennai bloggers? Mean Mean you. I am coming to hyd, informing you yet not meeting you. tit for tat:)
UTBT SAYS: Are you friends with my parents, cos this is exactly the same thing they are saying!
The Chennai stay was not the initial plan. We were flying to Chennai to go to Andaman. That did not happen, our booking got cancelled. So last min we tried Ceylon, that didn’t happen either. So stayed in Chennai with three packed suitcases, ready to leave anytime and an air of uncertainty Barely called MNI’s Amma and spoke to her over the phone.
Glad you made it while it is still a library.
Libraries I have been a member of
Anugraha – Abhiramapuram. I primarily dealt with Richie Rich and Casper comics. You know… the ones with Hostess twinkies ads in them.
RajaRajeswari Lending library – S.S.Colony. MAD comics. Asterix. Tin Tin. Hardy Boys.
Does this library stock those?
UTBT SAYS: Asterix – yes. Tin Tin – Yes. Hardy Boys – Yes. Richie Rich and Casper comics – theriyaleye-pa!
Appadiya….you are forgiven.did you try this during cyclone Thane?must be disappointing for the kids.they didn’t complain?
UTBT SAYS: Yes, during Thane. The kids were too busy having fun. Their latest obsession is crossing the Chennai streets, with an adult of course. Also I bought them some embroidery ring, cloth and related stuff. They were busy sewing their name and other patterns. The little one wants me to buy a sewing machine and a loom. They want to weave a saree for me and do their own embroidery it seems.
I bet Chula would have gone beserk, with what to read in the library. “One has to stumble upon it and decide whether to read it or not” so true. But the collection is immense and you can easily spend 3 to 4 hours in the children’s section itself. And lady you are just as funny on the phone, like on the blog and in FB. I wish, we had met 🙂
this is nice
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