People of all ages, income, races and levels of education
go to the library for Internet access, whether they have a connection at home or not.
«I actually
go to the library more than I did before I had my e-reader,» a respondent in her late twenties wrote.
I plan to
go to the library on my off days for a couple hours just to read these books to keep the motivation.
The great thing about this card, is that you don't have to
go to the library in person, you can do it all online.
Nevertheless, some questions, and I suspect many of those being answered by law firms or for which
people go to a library for help will remain resistant to these tools.
It can be something as simple
as going to the library, baking together, or even drinking lemonade on the back porch.
It may not be surprising, then, that while more people are borrowing eBooks from libraries, more people are
also going to libraries.
We
began going to the library and spending hours, days, months and years researching and reading articles, books and magazines from as far back as the 1940s.
Books were something we shared — we used to
go to the library together, we would read together, we would read some of the same books.
About 60 percent used the court's Web site, 19 percent sought help from a friend or relative, 11 percent from the court clerk, and 7
percent went to the library.
There are hundreds of books written about this,
so go to your library, get one, and follow the steps they recommend.
The people
who go to libraries, either don't have the money to buy all those books, or they first want to try them out.
Or
then go to the library and check - out a bunch of books that have to do with things going to sleep and talk about it over and over and over.