Today a boy came to the library asking about a book. He didn't remember much about it at first, but we eventually tracked it down!
Here was the initial reference question:
"I'm looking for a book. I don't remember what it was called, but it's a biography about a girl with orange curly hair."
Hmm, not much to work with. So I prodded a little further to see if I could get some more information that would help us.
Do you remember what this person did that made them famous? "I think it was something about science."
Have you gotten this book from the library before? "No, my mom showed it to me when we were looking for a book about Davy Crockett."
Ah ha! This was actually a good clue. I knew exactly where to find books about Davy Crockett, and from this clue we could guess that the book came from a nearby shelf. I had a guess as to who our mystery person was at this point, but wanted to dig a little deeper just to be sure. We wandered over to the biography section to see what jumped out at us from this area. When we got there I asked one last question:
Is the person you're thinking of from today's time, or from a long time ago? "Definitely a long time ago."
Bingo! I was pretty sure that this boy was looking for a book about Marie Curie, the female scientist who did lots of work on the subject of radioactivity in the late 1800s/early 1900s. Curie and Crockett would be very near each other on the shelf, and we have lots of books to choose from about Curie so the odds seemed to be with us.
The one hiccup in this equation was that I didn't know what color Marie Curie's hair was. After all, every photograph I'd ever seen of the famous scientist was black and white. Fortunately, a Marie Curie biography jumped out at us with a colorfully-illustrated cover. The lighting in the cover picture made Curie's hair seem to glow a golden, vaguely orange, color. Part of the Giants of Science series, this biography was written by Kathleen Krull and illustrated by Boris Kulikov, and it was exactly the book that this boy had remembered! Thank goodness it was on the shelf, because it might have been tough to sell him a non-orange, black and white Marie Curie biography.
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