The library is the natural habitate for a wide diversity of pests. Here’s a field guide:
- Dorkis Completis – This smallish hard shelled bug is commonly known as a geek or dweeb. This is the species of lbrary patron that wants some minute factoid of information that you know doesn’t exist because he himself can’t find it. What you’re never quite sure of is this pest’s intentions. Does he really need to find out where he can buy an H.O. scale model of Mount Rushmore or is he just rying to drive you crazy? Actually his intentions are probably sincere because he is just the kind of dweeb who plays with model trains well into adulthood.
- Jerkus Disgustus – This quick moving, winged pest is better known as the freckle bellied flasher. He rarely lights in one place in the library but seems to hover everywhere. Anyone wearing an oversized rain coat on a warm, sunny day is a good bet to a member of this species. Although physically harmless, he can cause great psychological damage to his victims. Call the police immediately upon spotting him.
- Readerus Murderis – Paint this pest – the murder mystery reader – with a ghoulish smile. There’s nothing that makes this species happier than a well conceived homicide. Some sprinkles of arsenic in a dry martini, a well placed blow to the head with a tire iron, a sterling silver carving knife in the back, and an expertly wired car bomb – these are the nuances of crime that keep murder mystery fans coming back for more. Actually this pest’s mosquito like thirst for literary blood can get a bit tiresome for the harried readers advisory librarian. The constant buzzing in the ear – “Why did you only buy 59 copies of the latest Stephanie Plum mystery?” – can become murderous indeed. One good way to keep this pest at bay is to tell her the murderer in every new whodunit.
- Genealogus Junkis – For sheer intensity there is no other library patron that rivals the amateur genealogist, a species commonly referred to by librarians as the “genie junkie.” This pest feels that the library exists for one reason and one reason only – to help him trace his family tree. For this patron, no genealogical resourse is too obscure or too expensive for the library to acquire. This pest has one other really annoying characteristic – he believes you really are interested in his extended family.
- Pupilus Giftis – This pest is better known as the gifted student. By strict definition, one or two percent of our elementary school population is intellectually gifted. Unfortunately, 100% of all parents think that their children are in this genius category. Think hard. When is the last time you heard a parent say, “My child is average.” The fact of the matter is that in an effort to appease parents, weak kneed educators have promulgated the myth that all children are in their own way gifted. The irony of course is that standardized testing scores reveal that elementary scholastic achievement has reached new depths of mediocrity. The best way to handle the gifted preschooler is to simply change the name of your weekly story hour from “Weekly Story Hour” to “Weekly Gifted Story Hour.”
- Studentus Moronis – The term moronic student is getting to be somewhat redundant isn’t it? What are they teaching these days in high school and college? Our nation would appear to be in grave danger. Not only do today’s students have trouble speaking in simple declarative sentences with subject/verb agreement, but many of them cannot tell you why we celebrate the 4th of July. The male version of the species is characterized by pants worn low and baggy. The females often sport incongruous clothing combinations such as mini-skirts with combat boots. Both genders are characterized by multiple earrings and tattoos. They like to preface their questions with the word “dude” as in “Dude, I need a copy of the newspaper from the day that Jesus was born.”
- Parentus Irresponsibilis – This species of pest – the irresponsible parent – can be detected less by its own physical appearance and more by the sounds emanating from its offspring. If you hear a child crying, screaming, whining, chortling, gurgling, shrieking, or howling, you can bet there is a parentus irrespnsibilits nearby who truly believes that in the library, his problem child is the librarian’s responsibility.
- Educatus Perkis – The perky teacher is the bumble bee of library pests. She’s always buzz, buzz, buzzing around demanding that you give her all the books on whales and with an extended fine free check-out period because, hey, it’s all about ‘dem kids. One bumble bee is an annoyance. A whole hive of them is a health hazard.
- Professorus Absentmindednis – The absent minded professor has traditionally been regarded as an endearing old eccentric. Not true. They can be quite unendearing especially when they assign a research paper on an esoteric subject without taking the time to determine whether or not the library has any resources on that subject. Who do the subequent frustrated students take their anger out on? That’s right…the librarian pays the price while the professor skates free.
