New! Gamers . . . in the Library?!

August 3rd, 2007 by Patrick

cover image

Our goal was to publish Gamers . . . in the Library?! in time for the Gaming, Learning and Libraries Symposium, where author Eli Neiburger was a keynote speaker. To the right is a carton shipped to the symposium. Hats off to Managing Editor Christine Schwab for making it happen. Yeah, I guess Eli deserves some credit too. Authors will tell you that a book project can shift the domestic workload and diminish attention space for family and friends. At the symposium, I saw Eli’s family and thanked them for letting us borrow him for a while. Eli assured me though that the book was written at Denny’s while the rest of the family slept. Eli is a funny guy. He also speaks truth. I chuckled when reading in the book’s introduction: “My son will surely cherish his memories of the first time he camped out with his dad . . . on the sidewalk in front of Toys R Us, the night before the Wii launch.” Eli used the same line at the symposium then clicked to the photograph documenting it. He is an unabashed gamer.

In short, I’m one of them. You know who I’m talking about. The thumb twiddlers. The cathode-ray zombies. The strung-out junkies who can’t even wait for the bus without staring at some sort of screen. I am a gamer.

In the spirit of confessions, I’m one of them too. That is, one of those parents who don’t let the videogame consoles or the gameboys into the house. We were afraid it might hinder the kids’ creativity; you know, turn them into thumb-twiddling, cathode ray zombies. We might be wrong. My teenage son was arguing the point just last night at dinner. If he had known of Eli’s work at Ann Arbor Public Library and in his book, it might have been Exhibit A.

After seeing the vibe gaming tournaments have created at the library, as shown in Eli’s keynote, it’s hard not to be a convert. A word of caution though. I often hear the argument for gaming in the library of getting kids in, especially that hard-to-reach teenage boy demographic, so that you can show what else the library has to offer. No, the gaming is the thing. It’s not a hustle for pushing books. Eli repeatedly warned against the bait and switch.

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