A
library stands to serve all patrons of the community and to provide them with the
resources that they desire. This includes those adults that find entertainment
within the pages of Young Adult literature or graphic novels. Reading
,regardless of genre or target age group, is still reading and if patrons enjoy
these “genres”, then they are legitimate literary choices. The library must
ensure that patrons understand that their preferences are of importance to the
library and do so by promoting and providing these materials.
First
and foremost, the library has a responsibility to provide resources that
reflect community needs and wants, as well as unbiased responses to these
desires. The American Library Association’s (ALA) Code of Ethics states, “We
provide the highest level of service to all library users through appropriate
and usefully organized resources; equitable service policies; equitable access;
and accurate, unbiased, and courteous responses to all requests (2008).” The
library strives to provide appropriate resources for its patrons. If adult
patrons desire Young Adult or graphic fiction novels, then it the library’s duty
to do so in order to continue to provide the highest level of service. If the
library chooses to not spend their budget on these “genres”, then they are not
truly meeting the needs of the community.
The
only way that the library can provide the resources that the community desires
is by assessing the community on what they want. Informally interview your
patrons, mail out surveys, run quantitative tests to see what collections are
being checked out; do a variety of assessments to develop a real understanding
of your community. If asked, many adults
may admit that they prefer Young Adult novels and can give insight into what sub-genres
they prefer which can help the library build up the collection. After the
collection is built, then staff can start to promote it.
Library
staff can also combat the biased opinions regarding adult enjoyment of Young
Adult and graphic novels by taking the time to promote the materials to adult
audiences. If the library shows that they feel this is a legitimate literary choices,
then patrons too will feel comfortable engaging with these materials. Dunneback
& Towner (2010) write, “Your patrons want to read these books. What do they
think if we consider romance unimportant and not worthy of our effort (p.
223).” Replace the word romance with Young Adult and graphic novels and
the message remains the same: don’t denigrate your patrons reading choices,
rather embrace them. Cataldi (2015) suggests that displays, book lists, and
bookmarks can all help to promote collections within the library. Taking time
to make these displays/tools can show patrons that you feel like there is
literary value in Young Adult and graphic novels to adults and increase the
positive opinions to the public.
Resources:
American Library Association. (2008). Code
of ethics. Retrieved from http://www.ala.org/tools/ethics
Cataldi,
E. (2015). Betwixt and Between: New Adult Fiction. The library journal. Retrieved
from https://www.libraryjournal.com/?detailStory=betwixt-and-between-new-adult-fiction-collection-development-september-1-2015
Dunneback, K. & Towner, M.W.
(2010). Everything romance. Integrated advisory services. Denver, CO:
Libraries Unlimited.
I like your comparison between the Romance genre and YA/graphic novels as far as all three being types of books that librarians may not take as seriously as other genres as a reading choice for adults. I think you make a really good point with that!
ReplyDeleteSpot on! I love the way you chose to address this week's prompt. Full points!
ReplyDelete