the library


I really miss the Edmonton public library this week.

I am going to a conference in Lake Tahoe tomorrow and I realised to my disappointment that although it is at a lake in Nevada it is not warm and sunny as I was predicting, due to the fact that the lake happens to be located on the incline of a 6000 ft above-sea-level mountain. Damn. I’m going to be stuck in a tiny tourist village on the top of a mountain where the only things to do are skiing and shopping (and golfing when the snow melts), none of which interest me at all. So I decided I had better get some books out of the library so I will not be bored to death when I am not attending the conference (I would have needed some anyway for the flight).

I have had various unsuccessful encounters with the Montreal library system and was prepared for the worst this time, but it was actually better than it could have been. I went to the Fraser-Hickson library in NDG (corner of Sommerled and Grand) which I had heard is quite good. Cote St Luc library is also good, but is too far away to walk and the bus service from our place to the library was not good at all, so I didn’t bother going there. All the libraries are completely separate here, there is no single centralized library system like there is in Edmonton. In fact, the different bouroughs (which at one point were individual cities and may be again if they demerge) own their libraries, so technically they can refuse membership to anyone who does not live in their bourough. Although this does not appear to be the case for all of them, as with Westmount library I just had to pay $2.

Montreal institutions seem to have a fixation with you carrying around your phone bill and presenting it to anyone who asks. I could not get a membership at the Westmount library the first time I went, as the phone bill was in Dan’s name only. They refused to accept any other identification except for the hydro quebec bill which was fortunately in my name. I was worried the same thing would happen when I went to the Fraser-Hickson library, but all they wanted was my contact information and the name, address and phone number of someone else who lives in Montreal as a reference! A reference to get a library card?? What is the world coming to? Despite this, I did succeed in getting a card and actually took out two books.

Anyway, because all the libraries are seprate, getting an interlibrary loan (so that I don’t have to go half way across the city to get a book I want to read) is essentially out of the question because you have to pay for it and I don’t think it is cheap.

In Edmonton, the situation was quite different. There was one and only one public library system and it had numerous branches throuout the city. For $10 a year the borrower had unrestricted access to any book in the system and could request it to be delivered to any branch for pick-up. The automated phone system, ELVIS (Edmonton Library Voice Information System) would automatically call when your book was available at the branch requested. (I think ELVIS has been updgraded to ELVIS II now or something like that). Once were finished, one could return the book to any branch. One could renew over the phone and search the catalogue online. NONE of this is true here. I have to say that the Edmonton Public Library has done an amazing job at making it easy and accessible for the residents of Edmonton. If Montreal’s system were like this, it would be much better. Ah well, another thing to adapt to.

Anwyay I expect to have internet access at the hotel so I may even have a chance to post a blog and some photos while I am there.



dr. wha?


Last night we watched the north american preview of the new Dr. Who series. I used to watch the original when I was a kid and I visited my Dad. I would visit for the weekend and I would watch “The Prisoner” at 12:30 on Saturday night and Dr. Who was usually on Saturday or Sunday too. I remember one time we watched one of the movies (I think it was Dr. Who and the Daleks but I could be wrong). Last year Dan and I also watched Pyramids of Mars which was very funny too.

The new series was a good continuation of the original. The sidekick character was too good looking and the Dr. was too orginary looking, though. And I like the original music better. The cheesy dialogue and plot lines are about the same – plastic manequins come to life, kidnap/eat the boyfriend of the soon to be sidekick (who does not notice until he malfunctions – I guess he had a flat peronsality to begin with!) and the doctor tries to save earth by killing the malevolant plastic intelligence controlling all the manequins with “antiplastic”. Thank goodness for quirky British humor!

In 11 days I will leave for a conference on the northwest shore of Lake Tahoe (on the Nevada side). I have never been that far south before in my life. That part of the world does not seem real to me. Too sunny or something. Maybe it will when I am there …?

I really want to learn how to cook curry and I have discovered that I am not really that good at it. I have tried Aloo Gobi three times now and each time it was ok, but not that good. Maybe there is a spice I am missing still, I don’t know. It is dissappointing. Thank goodness Pushap is near my work!

I have been doing a lot of walking lately. After the Caban à Sucre on Friday Dan and I walked home from Snowdon metro because we missed the bus. This monday I forgot to turn my alarm clock on and missed the last 115 and had to walk to work from De La Savanne metro. Last night we walked to and from Lisa’s house because it was a nice night. I think I will try and do more walking this spring and summer since I am not biking.