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Showing posts with label Bronx. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bronx. Show all posts

Thursday, November 3, 2016

Outrage in Bronx as Barnes & Noble Is Set to Close

Books & Bookstores

By SARAH MASLIN NIR NOV. 2, 2016



Shauna Rose and her son, Nicholai, 4, visited the children’s section of the Barnes & Noble in the Bronx on Wednesday. She says they go there every day after school and read the picture book “I Need My Monster.” Credit Amir Levy for The New York Times

Every day after school, 4-year-old Nicholai Rose demands that his mother take him first to the park then to the Barnes & Noble in the Baychester neighborhood of the Bronx. There, they snuggle in a corner in the children’s section and, each time, read “I Need My Monster,” his favorite picture book.
In a few months their ritual will end — permanently — when the store closes for good, leaving the Bronx, a borough with nearly 1.5 million people, without one general-interest bookstore. For residents, the closing carries a painful sting the borough knows too well, of being long underserved and overlooked, which persists even as the Bronx is experiencing a renaissance.

“How am I going to tell him that the bookstore is going?” said Nicholai’s mother, Shauna Rose, 29, as she sat in the store on Wednesday, the monster book on her lap. “And there’s nothing else.”

With 50,000 titles in its inventory, the Barnes & Noble opened in the Bronx in 1999. Two years ago, it nearly closed after the landlord sought to raise the rent. But it remained open after a public outcry, and after elected officials stepped in to assist in the rent negotiations. It has withstood the economic crunch that shut down smaller bookshops in the borough over the years. While there are a few bookstores in the Bronx attached to various universities and some stores that sell religious texts, the Barnes & Noble remains the last of its kind, until it closes in January, because of a rent increase. It will replaced by a Saks Off 5th store. Read more...

Tuesday, July 12, 2016

Welcome To The Library Hiding In A Garden Hiding In New York City by Katherine Brooks

Ben Hider via Getty Images
The earliest book ever published on American insects (1797, for the record) sits in a massive library in the Bronx, and fewer people than should be are aware of its existence.
And I’m talking about the library, not the book.

Stephen Sinon, head of special collections, research and archives at the New York Botanical Garden, describes the Mertz Library “as the largest of its kind in the world under one roof.” Founded in 1899, the haven for plant-related literature is often described as either the largest or the most comprehensive botanical library in the Americas. With over one million items — including The Natural History of the Rarer Lepidopterous Insects of Georgia by James Edward Smith — it sits rather quietly on the property of the Bronx Garden, hiding, one might put it, in plain sight. Read more...

Wednesday, July 2, 2014

New York Public Library to offer free Wi-Fi to needy users | New York Post

New York Public Library to offer free Wi-Fi to needy users

New York public libraries will soon lend out Wi-Fi hot spots to low-income members who can’t afford Internet at home.




Beginning in September, residents will be able to rent Wi-Fi devices
for up to a year from New York Public Library branches in areas with
low-Internet connectivity.




But the free Wi-Fi won’t be available to everybody. Only those
enrolled in the library’s adult-learning or after-school programs can
borrow a device.




“We see a definite need in our branches — people

 don’t have Wi-Fi at
home. They depend on us for their broadband,” said library spokeswoman
Angela Montefinise.




The “Check Out the Internet” program will be paid for with a $500,000
grant from the Knight Foundation and through library fund-raising.
NYPL, which has branches in Manhattan, The Bronx and Staten Island,
hopes to purchase 10,000 Wi-Fi devices.