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Image of action figure courtesy of Archie McPhee

Pearl worked at the Seattle Public Library at the time as the director of the Washington Center for the Book, and was well known locally due to her regular public radio appearances to recommend books. A year earlier, she had met a man who owned a novelty company at a dinner party and the idea to create a librarian action figure modeled after her was floated as a joke. Pearl never thought she’d hear another word about it.

“Everybody thought, ‘Who wants a librarian action figure?’ But it turns out that many, many, many thousands of people have a librarian somewhere in their background that they think fondly of, ” Pearl says. “Librarians play a very quiet, but important part in many people’s lives.”

The librarian in her background

Every day after school and every Saturday morning, as a little girl in Detroit, Pearl would walk or ride her bike to the local library because home was not a happy place. The library was a refuge, thanks to its endless stacks of books and a certain librarian named Francis Whitehead, who took a liking to Pearl and would play a pivotal role in her life.

“She was the person who really gave me lots of love and lots and lots of wonderful books to read, ” Pearl recalls. “Both of those things were very important to me.”

By age 10, Pearl knew she wanted to become a librarian just like Miss Whitehead. Because the library was best place in the world, she figured, and because of something she wouldn’t be able to articulate until years later.

“Librarians perform miracles, ” Pearl says. “We change lives by giving people the information they need, the escape they need through books.”

After Pearl became a librarian, her first job was in the Detroit public library system, just like Miss Whitehead.

Today, Pearl is retired, but her long career as a “reading evangelist” took her from Michigan to Oklahoma to Washington, from local radio to NPR to becoming a best-selling author.

Pearl attributes much of her success to other people: “Everything wonderful that’s happened to me has happened because I was friends or good acquaintances with somebody else, ” she says. But of course, following the path of a lifelong passion owes at least as much to Pearl’s own ability to seize opportunities and take risks.

Image courtesy of Nancy Pearl

From the South to the Pacific Northwest

Pearl moved to Oklahoma when her husband got a job at a university there, and worked at a good friend’s bookstore for nine years. But when the store started having financial troubles, she found an opportunity to return to the library life by chatting up a customer who happened to work at the Tulsa Public Library and told her about two open positions.

Pearl’s boss in Tulsa, with whom she had become very good friends, eventually took a job with the Seattle library system and had a proposal: to create a job for Pearl that would be all about spreading the word about good books and increasing awareness about library programs. The job also offered Pearl the opportunity to leave Oklahoma, where she was tired of always finding herself the most liberal person in the room.

But there was very real downside to the position. It would require Pearl and her husband to live in different states for four years until he retired.

The couple survived the separation by talking on the phone every night. In retrospect, all that phone time allowed them to slow down and share intimate details about their daily lives that they might have ignored in the blur of daily cohabitation.

“It was, I think, a very valuable part of our marriage, ” she says.

Her husband eventually joined her in Seattle, where Pearl was making a name for herself with her library outreach programs. In 2011, Library Journal named her “Librarian of the Year.” Then came the action figure, and a best-selling book of recommendations for readers called Book Lust. And she recently finished her first novel, which comes out next year.

But more than a successful career, Pearl’s life in the library always goes back to how Miss Whitehead and the Detroit Public Library helped her discover herself.

Source: slackhq.com
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Sapporo Snow Festival (Yuki Matsuri)

This exuberant celebration of snow and ice has been held since 1950 in Sapporo, the capital city Hokkaido. The week's activities feature a colorful parade and competitive events in winter sports, as well as a display of colossal snow sculptures along the main street and in Odori Park. The sculptures are spectacular—intricately carved and often several stories high. About three weeks before the festival, a wooden frame is built and packed with snow; after the snow has hardened the frame is removed and the carving begins. A different theme is chosen each year for the sculptures. More...

Quote of the Day
Who can look down upon the grave even of an enemy, and not feel a compunctious throb, that he should ever have warred with the poor handful of earth that lies moldering before him?
Washington Irving
(1783-1859)