From Guardian Books
Kensal Rise library in north London. Photograph: Martin Godwin
Brent council has been trying to shut Kensal Rise library down  since the 1980s – and now a depressing piece of legalese is trying to  help them on their way. The judgment delivered at the narrow, cold high  court showed only the huge gap between the arcana of the judicial,  bureaucratic mindset and the facts as seen by ordinary people: the  library that generations of people in Brent have used, loved and paid  their rates for is being stolen from us by a combination of our own  Labour council and a coalition government that sits on its hands. Mark  Twain, the great American writer who opened the library over a century  ago, must be turning in his grave at Councillor Ann John's laughable  statement that she is "pleased" because now Brent can "push ahead with  our exciting plans to improve Brent's library service and offer a  21st-century service for the benefit of all our residents". Why is she  excited by the thought of closing down half the libraries in a poor borough at a time when London's unemployment has hit a new high? Ordinary  people all over the country will not be fooled. They know that closing  libraries means that overstretched parents and childminders will no  longer have a safe, warm place where they can take their small children  after school. They know that teenagers with nowhere to study at home  because the television is always on, or there are too many people in too  few rooms, will no longer be able to sit down in quiet corners of a  book-lined room and do their homework. They know that people who have  lost their jobs, or never had a job, will no longer be able to come to a  place where they need feel no shame and look up courses where they can  learn or clubs they can join. They know that newcomers to the country  will no longer be able to come in off our cold streets and read  newspapers and magazines to learn the language, or find the whereabouts  of colleges, clinics and schools. If libraries are allowed to close  without a fight, how long will that other service that was once the envy  of the world, the NHS, still survive? Oh, and the books. The stories  that help us understand each other, the non-fiction that gives us the  tools to survive in the world, the picture books that help toddlers make  sense of  themselves – are they to be only for rich people now? Brent's  Labour council should hang their heads in shame. 
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