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Jill

Librarian tattoos

Cory Doctorow at 8:08 pm Thu, Sep 13, 2012

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On Mental Floss, Jill Harness's collection of librarian tattoos. Above, Elizabeth Skene's card-catalog sleeve, by Frank William of the Chicago Tattoo Company. Right, Michelle's super-librarian tattoo, chosen to represent her career as a high-school librarian, based on Mary Marvel, and done by Chris Cockrill of Avalon II Tattoo.

11 Amazing Librarian Tattoos (via Making Light)

I write books. My latest is a YA science fiction novel called Homeland (it's the sequel to Little Brother). More books: Rapture of the Nerds (a novel, with Charlie Stross); With a Little Help (short stories); and The Great Big Beautiful Tomorrow (novella and nonfic). I speak all over the place and I tweet and tumble, too.

MORE:  happy mutants • libraries • tattoos

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  • Snig

    I’ve a great fondness for librarians, with or without illustrations. 

  • dayhat

    as per tattoo number seven – is it common in the US to use the Dewey Decimal or even the Cutter number for fiction?
    I’ve never seen it in Australia or the UK. Maybe I don’t go to enough libraries

    • nixiebunny

      The lady with the tattoo answers a related question here:
      http://www.formspring.me/eladarling/q/973780321

      I’ve only seen fiction sorted by author last name in our local public library. Call numbers would make it difficult for the masses to find their Harry Potter.

      • Snig

        I think my college libraries tended to use Dewey Decimal for fiction, but smaller town libraries I used went with last name.  Sometimes Sci fi and fantasy are in their own section, also under last name. 

        • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100002842189180 Susan Ramseur

           College Libraries use the Library of Congress system.

          • Snig

            You’re right, I just remembered it being coded, not sorted under the last name.

    • http://twitter.com/ArtfulMagpie K M

       Technically, all fiction “should” be cataloged with a Dewey Decimal number. That’s how the system was designed. However, most public libraries have such a huge amount of fiction that it would be unwieldy and confusing to put it all into the 800s, so they separate it out into a section of its own, sometimes further broken down by genre, and arranged by author’s last name. However, the MARC records still contain Dewey numbers. :-)

    • slimejonny

      I can only speak for University libraries, but we use the Library of Congress classification for everything. Never have we done it Dewey.

  • http://www.markcrummett.com crummett

    Would it be sexist to say she’s stacked?

  • Shashwath T.R.

    I _was_ expecting a tattoo of an orangutan… Or maybe a tattooed orangutan… 

    • digi_owl

      One drinking tea perhaps?

    • ImmutableMichael

      Just don’t use the “M” word…. They’re apes….

  • benher

    Librarians are my heros!

    • pizzicato

      Was a part time librarian when I was a student, I’ll take that complement! Cataloguing new books and ‘securing’ them from book thieve was my favourite activities.  

      • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100002842189180 Susan Ramseur

        I was the student coordinator at a University Library. We were never as lucky to have a student who earned an MLS.

  • orangedesperado

    I like the theory/not so sure about the practice.

  • http://www.disoriented.net/ angusm

    Today’s newest niche fetish: tattooed librarians. I’ll get to work registering the websites …

  • Spinkter

    Back in the day, I seriously considered applying to the graduate program at the local university’s library school (now called information science) because of the simple fact that all the librarians I knew were super-fucking-hawt.  

    Then I got married which kind of put the kibosh on that idea.  Still think a lot about Information Science as a second career, though for different, more pragmatic reasons now.

    • nixiebunny

      I married a librarian. So there.

    • Halloween_Jack

       It’s fairly difficult to get a job in the field right now, because library schools promoted the degree program in the Aughts under the assumption that lots of baby boomer librarians would be retiring soon, opening up lots of jobs in the field. This really didn’t happen, in part because the field shrunk somewhat as many municipal governments cut library hours and branches (and the positions to go with them) and in part because a lot of Boomer librarians held onto their jobs past the former customary retirement age, leaving a lot of recent library school grads unemployed or underemployed with significant school loan debt.

      I’m saying all of this not because I want to necessarily discourage you from pursuing the degree and field, but just as a reality check.

      • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100002842189180 Susan Ramseur

        H_J, you are so right!

  • rully roslan

      that possess high artistic tattoos …

  • Bender

    Thanks Cory, I really enjoyed checking her out. This post was long overdue, but the results were so fine.

  • Boundegar

    Sadly, librarian is one of those professions whose funding has been cut so severely it’s becoming a volunteer pursuit.  I wonder if our grandchildren will think of them like lamplighters and uniformed service station attendants.

    • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100002842189180 Susan Ramseur

       …with Master Degree.

  • http://www.facebook.com/nora.sawyer Nora Sawyer

    I’m an un-tattooed librarian, but I’ve always kind of liked the idea of getting the word “bookworm” tattooed across my knuckles. Not enough to actually do it, mind.

    • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100002842189180 Susan Ramseur

       Oh, Nora, DO IT!

  • Michelle Ohnstad

    I’m honored that Cory Doctorow mentioned my librarian superhero tattoo!