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A Scent Called Library
by Roz Warren

Photo by Susan Q Yin on Unsplash

A company called Solstice Scents is marketing a scent called Library, which it describes as smelling like “leather bound books, a carved rosewood mantle, dying fireplace embers, wood wainscoting, cedar shelving and aged paper.”

I worked in an actual library for 21 years, and my workplace didn’t smell like any of these things. So what should a scent called Library smell like? To find out, I asked a group of librarians, “if a fragrance were to smell like your workplace, what would it smell like?”

Here’s a sampling of their responses:

Books and popcorn

Mold and dust

Cold tea and inventory anxiety

Sanitizing wipes

Pollen and book mold and the smell of cut grass

Marijuana, hand sanitizer and service animals

Underfunding and despair

Body odor and tequila-scented sanitizer

Fish from that rat bastard microwaving his lunch in the breakroom

Farts

Lysol

Aging carpet

Eau de livre

Body odor from certain “regulars” and magic markers

Pee, cigarettes and a touch of mold

Toasted bagels, wood polish and plants

Bourbon, bureaucracy and chamomile

Musty paper, homeless people and microwaved popcorn

Politics and glue

Dead mice

My favorite comment?

The scent ‘middle school library’ is best enjoyed in a ventilated area

Maybe we can interest Solstice Scents in putting together a perfume that reflects what libraries really smell like, based on these suggestions.

Or not.

All I know for sure is that after working in an actual library for 21 years, I wouldn’t buy somebody a perfume that would leave them smelling like one.

Although buying a bottle of “Library” for our library director would have been a funny joke.


Thanks to Don Be, whose post inspired this piece. Any money Roz makes from publishing it will be donated to Everylibrary