Tag Archives: Toronto Public Library

TPL (Kinda) Back Up and (Sorta) Running

The Oldest Libraries in the World

This is what you are likely to confront on your next visit to the TPL

Here’s the good news: You can take out, put holds on, and return books once again at the Toronto Public Library (TPL). Here’s the bad news: The TPL branches look like the above picture because their website is still down after some backhanded biblioclasts carried out a cyberattack on the TPL last October. Yes, you read that correctly. For the last three and a half months, the TPL has had no functioning website — and still doesn’t.

However, you can now visit a branch, let the kind and kindly librarians know of a title you are looking for (only two at a time until further notice, I was told), and then take out said title(s) for the usual three-week literary party.

In related news (i.e., my beef with the news outlets), the British Library was also the victim of a cyberattack in November 2023, and it’s online services are still down, too. I know what you’re asking yourself right now: Where’s the beef? Unfortunately, Wendy’s does not have the answer to this one.

The British Library, along with the Library of Congress in Washington, D.C., is the largest library in the world. The TPL is the largest library system in Canada and averaged a higher circulation per capita than any other public library system in 2023. And yet the news has been conspicuously lacking any news about two major events in the world of knowledge sharing and literature.

Books — and by extension libraries — may not be cool or relevant to some people in 2024, but I can assure all the people who make a living on reporting the news that there are still enough antiquated bibliophiles out there who thirst for more information on the cyberattacks to warrant greater coverage than has been made available up to now. And be careful journalists; we (wannabe) literary savants will not be easily ignored — and we carry a big bookmark.

UPDATE: As of March 15, 2024, the TPL is fully operational once again, online and at all branches.

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TPL Book Sanctuary Collection

There is a reason why I am a proud supporter of the Toronto Public Library (TPL), the busiest urban public library system in the world. Yes, you read that correctly. With its 4 million branch visits and 33.3 million visits to TPL online platforms in 2021, it is extremely meaningful on a worldwide scale that the TPL has established The Book Sanctuary Collection, which “represents books that have been challenged, censored or removed from a public library or school in North America. The 50 adult, teen and children’s books in our collection are available for browsing and borrowing in our branches and online.”

Among the 50 books on this TPL-protected list: The Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood (profanity, sexual overtones, being anti-religious, 2SLGTQ+ characters and for being morally bankrupt), Atonement by Ian McEwan (poor grammar and sentence structure), The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison (portrayal of childhood sexual abuse), The Diary of Anne Frank (Anne’s discussion of her sexuality and genitalia), and The Glass Castle by Jeannette Walls (sexual content and situations dealing with alcoholism and abuse).

I’d like to rant and rave about the idiots who tried so hard to have these works of art excised from our libraries and education systems, but in truth I’d rather use my time to read a book. Perhaps one of the books listed above.

P.S. For all the bibliophiles out there, I highly recommend two feel-good books about books — and most definitely for bookish bookies — by Alberto Manguel that are not banned (to my knowledge) in any library: A History of Reading and The Library at Night. Oh, and for all the other bibliolaters and bibliophages, be sure to check out this list of wicked-awesome book-related words.

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TPL Book Sale Blowout

Image result for huge book sale

Bibliophiles of the world unite! The Toronto Public Library is having a fire sale on books you won’t want to miss.

The Friends’ Clearance Book Sale will take place at the Toronto Reference Library (789 Yonge St.) from March 16-18. All books are 10-50 cents (cash only)! In the parlance of today’s publishing world, “That’s basically free!”

To learn more about the event, click here

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