Post-reveals Yuletide friending meme
Jan. 1st, 2019 09:01 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
I hope everyone had as good a Yuletide as I did! It's sometimes hard to find people who like the same small, Yuletide-eligible fandoms as you do, so I thought it would be great to do a friending meme after reveals, so that people could find and add the authors, recipients and commenters who made their 2018 Yuletides so enjoyable.
Please feel free to share this meme far and wide. To participate, just leave a comment on this post, copying the code below and filling in your own answers. I've enabled anonymous commenting so if you don't have a Dreamwidth account you can still participate.
People who didn't participate in Yuletide are also welcome to participate in this friending meme — obviously just leave out answers to the questions regarding Yuletide.
Please feel free to share this meme far and wide. To participate, just leave a comment on this post, copying the code below and filling in your own answers. I've enabled anonymous commenting so if you don't have a Dreamwidth account you can still participate.
People who didn't participate in Yuletide are also welcome to participate in this friending meme — obviously just leave out answers to the questions regarding Yuletide.
no subject
Date: 2019-01-05 12:54 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2019-01-05 01:25 pm (UTC)The problem there, of course, is that a lot of the time libraries do customer service, especially at public libraries. At academic libraries, you might not be public-facing as much but those jobs still need to be filled, and part of your degree is in being a more helpful google interface. If you aren't doing public-facing work, you're still working with a lot of specialized programs and spreadsheets and bureaucracy.
During the library degree you'll be able to specialise in academic/public/archives (which I do not understand, as neither of my friends who did library degrees were interested by it). But, like. If you're interested in working at a library, talk to librarians about the realities of their jobs and not just the aesthetic part of getting to be around books all day.
no subject
Date: 2019-01-05 01:40 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2019-01-05 02:44 pm (UTC)1. Customer service experience (so you can work comfortably at a busy enquiry desk helping people find books, 'being a more helpful Google interface' as
2. Really good IT skills, particularly with Microsoft Office (honestly, half the time I seem to just spend my days solving people's problems with Word, PowerPoint, Excel, and basic email stuff).
3. Willingness to learn new things and adapt to a really quickly changing field.
If those things suit you, then academic libraries might be the place for you. But if you don't like customer service, I would probably recommend something more like special collections (medieval manuscripts or early printed books, or some other kind of specialised collection of books such as music librarianship) or archives, since you'll do a lot less customer-facing work and a lot more hanging around with books. I'd probably advise speaking to someone who works in that kind of area in your own country, though, to see what it's like.