Book returned to library after 3,000-mile mistake

Mariam Issimdar
BBC News, Norfolk
Robby West
BBC News, Norfolk
Reporting fromSwaffham Library
Norfolk Libraries A man and a woman holding a copy of a book while standing in front of a bookshelf. They are both smiling. The man is bald and wearing a dark grey sweater. The woman has a knitted blue cardigan on over a blue top. The book is pink and has a rabbit on its cover.Norfolk Libraries
The book was returned to Norfolk after being mistakenly taken to its namesake county in the US

A book taken from a library in Norfolk has been returned after it was mistakenly handed in to another library in the US.

The copy of Animal Ark ended up at Norfolk Library in Connecticut - more than 3,000 miles (4,800km) from where it was borrowed in Swaffham.

It was brought home by a Norfolk holidaymaker who had it brought to his attention during a trip across the pond.

"Quite how someone got confused and returned it to the wrong place, we have no idea," Swaffham Library said on Facebook.

"Oh, and there's the fact it's literally thousands of miles away and across an entire ocean.

"But still. It made it there, and it has now made it back!"

Google/BBC A composite of two library exteriors. The picture on the right shows a brick and flint library with a flat roof in Swaffham. The other library is in the US and has a few pitched rooves with a mini turret style addition to the structure. The building is made of red brick.Google/BBC
Norfolk Libraries said its Swaffham building was "very different" to the site in Connecticut

Ann Havemeyer, the director of the US library, said the book had been dropped off in a returns drawer outside the building.

"We had no idea and we still don't know who put it in the book drawer, and we were kind of perplexed about what to do," she told the BBC.

Ms Havemeyer said staff "couldn't believe it" when a man and his sister from Norfolk, England, later turned up by sheer coincidence.

Following conversations with a librarian, it was agreed they would return it to its rightful home.

Librarian Yun Ling, who has worked in Swaffham for 14 years, said it was "lovely to see" the book back where it belonged.

"I was amazed that it came back in one piece," she added.

Listen: 3000 mile mistake for returned library book

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