Petit points out that Portland State libraries no longer fine for overdue books, instead charging a replacement fee after a certain period, but that won’t happen here.
“We don’t care who it is,” Petit said. “We’d just like to say, ‘Thank you, and we’re sorry they felt so bad.'”
However, she says that she feels empathy for the guilty book user, saying she’s been in the same situation herself.
“My family has lost books,” she said. “I have kids, and we’ve actually had to pay a replacement fee. Sometimes librarians can be the worst at returning books on time.”
This is hardly the only time a long-overdue book has been returned.
In June, a Maryland library reported that a graphic novel version of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein was returned after 34 years—only after its borrower found out she would not be fined an exorbitant amount. That same library, Enoch Pratt Free Library in Baltimore, received a package in 2010 from a WWII veteran who had accidentally taken a book he’d checked out 65 years earlier when he moved across the country.
In 2013, a professor at Queen’s University in Belfast learned he’d had an overdue University of Vancouver poetry book with him for 47 years and returned it when the £8,577.50 fine was waived. He told The Independent, “I suppose the moral of the story if you discover an overdue book is make sure it’s really, really overdue before you think about returning it.”
In 2011, a 123-years-overdue book was returned to the Troubeck Institute in Great Britain after it was found in a museum.
However, the record for longest-overdue-book belongs to, who else, George Washington. Months after being sworn in as President in 1789, he checked out two books, including The Law of Nations by Emmerich de Vattel and a collection of transcripts from the British House of Commons, from the New York Society Library. Washington never returned the books and they weren’t found until staff at Mount Vernon discovered them in 2010. They were overdue by 221 years.
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David Matthews operates the Wayback Machine on Fusion.net—hop on. Got a tip? Email him: [email protected]
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