"The older people in your country and in my country still like to come to library though the number may be declining. There is a huge opportunity. I think by encouraging them, we would be providing opportunities to make them feel they are needed," Tom Forrest, former Director of Cultural Services in Oxfordshire, told PTI here on the eve of his interaction with library experts of the country in New Delhi.
"Libraries should have mobile apps. You can read an e-book and access catalogues online. In fact physical books and digital versions should supplement each other and build a bridge between the two generations, both of whom should be engaged in active library movement," Forrest, who has worked in over 20 countries to impart knowledge on using technology to improve access to services and content, said.
20-age group equally, Forrest said, "Libraries can't be seen in isolation from the places frequented by this generation like shopping malls and plexes and we have to tailor them to younger people as well. That remains the challenge."
Forrest, who was here on an invitation from the British Council to give a talk in Kolkata on UK Libraries Today and Tomorrow, said, he had been hearing about death of books for years but that would never happen.
"I know the nostalgia tinged with books and classics which becomes apparent as you flip through the pages of a classic physically. I want some of that nostalgia captured digitally," he said, adding these issues would come up during his interaction with Indian public library experts, here and in New Delhi later.
"I am told they have an agreement with the British Library to work together. Their chief executive is coming over here soon. The two institutions will collaborate in sharing skills. There are many shareable documents with a shareable past between the two institutions," Forrest said.
Among the present generation of library readers in his country, he said there was a wide following for present day Indian origin writers like Vikram Seth, Jhumpa Lahiri and Amit Chowdhury.
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