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Long-lost library book returned to San Antonio 82 years late — from Oregon

Long-lost library book returned to San Antonio 82 years late — from Oregon

Axiosa day ago
When one long-lost copy of "Your Child, His Family and Friends" was last checked out from the San Antonio Public Library, San Antonians were on the homefront of World War II, the movie adaptation of "For Whom the Bell Tolls" had just premiered, and fewer than 500,000 people lived here.
The latest: In June, the wandering book finally returned home — 82 years later — courtesy of an Oregon family, the library said in a news release Thursday.
Catch up quick: The library received an unmarked package from Oregon containing the well-worn parenting book by Frances Bruce Strain, as well as a note.
The sender, who did not include a name, explained they discovered it while sorting through their late father's belongings.
The sender believes their grandmother checked it out when their father was 11 years old but never returned it after she was transferred to work at the U.S. Embassy in Mexico City.
What they're saying:"I hope there is no late fee for it because Grandma won't be able to pay for it anymore," the note read, according to the library.
The book was due July 30, 1943.
By the numbers: In 1943, late fees were 3 cents a day. Returned on June 1, 2025, the book would be 29,892 days late — a $896.76 tab, assuming the rate never changed.
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Library book returned after 82 years. Note says, 'Grandma won't be able to pay for it anymore'
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