College and Research Libraries


454 I College & Research Libraries • September 1980 

American reader might feel, with some jus-
tification, that treatment of library and re-
lated professional associations in two columns 
of the article on the United States is insuf-
ficient, whereas articles of that or greater 
length are devoted to individual associations 
of many foreign countries. Balance of cover-
age may also be questioned. For instance, 
law and medical libraries are given lengthy 
treatment whereas theological libraries do 
not even appear in the "parallel index." 
Moreover, the American Theological Li-
brary Association is mentioned in only one 
sentence in the section on library and re-
lated professional associations in the United 
States (p.581). Similar criticism may be ex-
pressed on behalf of libraries in several 
other special subject and professional fields. 
The authors of historical articles are espe-
cially to be commended for full and com-
prehensive coverage of their subjects. Their 
contributions add significantly to the litera-
ture of library history. 

The ALA World Encyclopedia clearly fills 
a need for a one-volume reference work 
that provides extensive and up-to-date in-
formation related to libraries and informa-
tion services. Although the multivolume 
Encyclopedia of Library and Information 
Science, edited by Kent, Lancour, and 
Daily, is far more monumental in both 
length and scope, and although The ALA 
Yearbook published annually since 1976 
provides timely "state-of-the-art" . coverage, 
neither of these works lessens the value or 
appropriateness of this new ALA publica-
tion. The volume is attractively designed 
and the clarity of type, composition, and 
overall format make it easy to use. Printed 
on Forest Book Natural English Finish- pa-
per and bound in maroon buckram with gold 
embossed lettering, this volume's aesthetic 
qualities complement its considerable value 
for reference and research.-Kenneth G. 
Peterson, Southern Illinois University, Car-
bondale. 

Metcalf, Keyes DeWitt. Random Recollec-
tions of an Anachronism; or, Seventy-Five 
Years of Library Work. New York: 
Readex Books, 1980. 401p. $14.95. LC 
70-67213. ISBN 0-918414-02-4. 
Librarians have been surprisingly reticent 

in writing about themselves. William War-

ner Bishop, Louis Shores, and, a little ear-
lier, Arthur E. Bostwick have written auto-
biographies, J. C. M. Hanson's manuscript 
of his early years has recently been edited 
for publication, and there are a few more, 
but we have much less than we should 
about American librarians in their own 
words. Metcalf overcame his reluctance 
only after urging from his publisher and his 
discovery that younger librarians in his li-
brary administration seminar at Rutgers in 
1958 were indeed interested in listening· to 
his informal accounts of libraries and librari-
ans. Once convinced, he spent five years 
reviewing his correspondence and some at 
Oberlin and New York Public Library and 
calling up details from a remarkable store of 
memory. This volume, covering the first 
forty-eight years of his life as student and 
librarian, is written in an earnest, straight-
forward style that will earn no literary 
awards but tells with unmistakable clarity 
what one librarian recalls of an extraordi-
nary career. In these days when self-
revelatory autobiographies crowd the book-
shelves, Metcalfs book may seem remark-
ably impersonal. Indeed, there are many 
points at which one would like to interrupt 
the narrative to ask what he felt about the 
events that have just occurred. His engage-
ment and marriage to Martha Gerrish, the 
birth of his children, and other personal de-
tails are reported as matter-of-fact occur-
rences. Some matters are simply not to be 
discussed with strangers. 

Metcalf s childhood and early education, 
which occupies the first quarter of the 
volume, see~ harsh by today' s standards, 
but there is no suggestion that he or his 
brothers and sisters considered themselves 
unfortunate in any way. His mother died 
when he was five and his father three years 
later; his oldest sister, Marion, gave up her 
teaching career to return and take care of 
the younger children. Metcalf's obvious 
pride in referring to other members of his 
family throughout the book suggests that 
she must have been a remarkable woman. 
His recall of those years, if not total, is re-
markable in details: His first motion pic-
ture, breakfast in a Cleveland restaurant for 
ten cents, weeding an onion field for five 
cents an hour, reading J. S. C. Abbot's 
Civil War and Theodore Roosevelt's Naval 



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456 I College & Research Libraries • September 1980 

History of the War of 1812 from the Sunday 
school library are typical examples . He 
spent three weeks working for his brother-
in-law Azariah Smith Root in the Oberlin 
College Library during a year of enforced 
vacation to recuperate from the variety of 
ailments of a frail boy, and the experience 
was a turning point of sorts. When he re-
turned to high school, the family moved to 
Oberlin and he became the page and errand 
boy at Oberlin; in his words, "I have been 
doing library work ever since except for 
four summers." The summers were spent in 
vigorous outdoor work on farms and one 
summer with a surveying team in Montana. 
A frail boy no longer, he became an enthu-
siast of football and track, an interest that 
continued through his New York Public 
Library years, when he spent many 
weekends officiating at football games and 
track meets. 

Metcalfs Oberlin years were useful ones 
for a budding librarian. The collections 
brought together by Azariah Root were un-
usual for a small college. A new Carnegie 
building was completed in 1908, the year 

Metcalf entered college. The job of super-
vising the move from the older Spear Li-
brary and merging the college library books 
with those of the students' Union Library 
Association was his . The assignment in-
cluded placing an art collection in the new 
building and sleeping on guard until locks 
were fitted to the doors . Preparing red rope 
paper binders for unbound newspapers and 
periodicals was a recurring Christmas proj-
ect. During his college career Metcalf had a 
hand in virtually all the activities of a col-
lege library. College courses, viewed in ret-
rospect, seem less important elements of 
his education than experience gained in li-
brary tasks and athletic contests. 

In September 1911 he entered the newly 
established library school of the New York 
Public Library, the only man in a class of 
forty. The course work was easy enough to 
leave time for exploring the city and for a 
temporary job cataloging the library at the 
National Guard Armory . In January, when 
Azariah Root was unable to find a staff 
member willing to take ·charge during his 
sabbatical, Metcalf was appointed executive 

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assistant for a year, an experience that was 
well worth a year's delay in the library 
school. The following January he returned 
to complete the first year with a new class 
and was appointed chief of book stacks 
while completing the second year. 

Except for another year at Oberlin in 
191~17 as acting librarian while Root sub-
stituted as director of the library school for 
the ailing Mary Wright Plummer, the re-
maining years covered in this volume were 
spent in the New York Public Library as ex-
ecutive assistant to the director and later, 
chief of the Reference Department. These 
years were important ones in Metcalf's 
career; the problems the library faced were 
sometimes overwhelming, occasionally 
bizarre, always told with detachment and 
candor and in unexpected detail. Staff selec-
tion, inventory, microphotography, trouble-
some readers, selection of books in special-
ized subjects, dealing with prospective 
donors, limiting the clientele of the library, 
book thefts, and streamlining the technical 
processes are among the many problems 
that Metcalf comments on. But his recollec-
tions of the people he worked with are the 
most interesting part of the New York Pub-
lic Library years. The brief career of Whit-
taker Chambers in the library has not, to 
my knowledge, been told before. Metcalf s 
account of the brilliant but sometimes abra-
sive -Adelaide Hasse differs from the sketch 
in the Dictionary of American Library 
Biography. The work of G. William Ber-
quist as library detective is reported in 
greater detail than in previous accounts. 
Metcalf s admiration of H. M. Lyden berger 
adds considerably to the information avail-
able on a man who should have written his 
own autobiography. 

Surprisingly, Metcalfs important work in 
the American Library Associatic,m begins 
late in these years. For an account of these 
activities and the years at Harvard we will 
have to wait for the second volume. It will 
be well worth the wait.-]oe W. Kraus, Illi-
nois State University, Normal. 

Fussier, Herman H., and Bryan, Harrison. 
Reflections on the Future of Research 
Libraries: Two Essays. Clayton, Victoria: 
Graduate School of Librarianship, 
Monash University, 1978. 36p. A$6. 

Recent Publications I 451 

ISBN 0-86862-002-5. (Distributed by: 
James Bennett Group, 4 Collaroy St., 
Collaroy, N. S. W. 2097, Australia.) 
This first monographic publication of the 

Graduate School of Librarianship at Monash 
University contains two essays on the . future 
of research libraries. One, "Current Re-
search Library Issues," was written by Her-
man H. Fussier, Martin A. Rrerson Dis-
tinguished Service Professor at the Gradu-
ate Library School of the University of Chi-
cago. Professor Fussier was a visiting pro-
fessor at Monash during the 1977 fall term. 
The second essay, "The Future of the Re-
search Library," was written by Harrison 
Bryan, librarian of the University of Syd-
ney, who is considered Australia's foremost 
writer on academic and research librar-
ianship. 

Fussier's essay is a revised text of a pub-
lic lecture given at Monash University on 
19 October 1977. In this lecture Fussier 
points out that the problems facing research 
libraries are largely due to the growth in 
the literature and rising costs brought about 
by severe inflation, coupled with the ever-
expanding informational needs of library 
patrons. Among possible general responses, 
he suggests the development of a national 
system for sharing currently published and 
future research resources on a rather large 
scale from a national center, as well as the 
development of a national capability for 
storing and providing access to bibliographi-
cal data in machine-readable form. Citing 
specific proposals for change, Fussier ex-
pands the following topical headings: re-
source sharing, sharing monographs, sharing 
retrospective resources, preservation, 
photocopying and copyright, bibliographical 
control, and technology. 

Bryan's paper was written for a seminar 
he shared with Professor Fussier at Monash 
in October 1977. In his paper, Bryan begins 
by defending the book and stating that it 
"will survive on its own merits or not at 
all." He reviews the changes in the research 
library in Australia in recent years: upgrad-
ing of physical plants, astonishing growth in 
resources, minimal concern for nonbook 
materials except for recent emphasis on 
microform, improvement in both sophistica-
tion and effectiveness in library administra-
tion, important but cautious degree of tech-