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Man pays boss’s 48-year-old library fine as ‘fun’ Christmas present

In 1972, a young boy named Tony Goodman borrowed a book about pirates from the Marin County Free Library.

But, he never returned it and has been living with the guilt of his misstep for nearly half a century.

That is until Monday, when a Good Samaritan named Kenny Newell paid the $58 to clear Goodman’s name.

Newell is actually an employee of Goodman, CEO of PeopleFun, a mobile game development company in the Dallas-Fort Worth area, and wanted to do something fun for him for Christmas.

Newell said in a message to the library:

“Obviously, it was almost 50 years ago and (the book) has been lost to time, but I was wanting to pay the late fee or replacement cost for the book as a joke and giving him a confirmation receipt for Christmas.”

Marin County Free Library Tony Goodman checked out “Look Out for Pirates” in 1972 and never returned it the Marin County Free Library. The guilt always haunted Goodman until his employee paid the 48-year-old fine as a fun 2020 Christmas present.

Goodman checked out the book, “Look Out for Pirates,” when he was a first grader at Corte Madera’s Neil Cummins Elementary School.

Goodman told Marin library officials:

The library who calculated the fine by charging a $1-per-year late fee and a $10 book-replacement cost based on early 1970s dollars.

While the library no longer charges late fees, officials said the old fee-structure would have resulted in a fine of $1,786.50 or 1 cent for every one of the 17,865 days the book was past due.

Stephanie Hartwell-Mandella, the Corte Madera library branch manager, said:

“Although, we would’ve capped the final (bill) at the original cost of the book, which was probably no more than $5 or $10 back in 1971.”

Marin County Free Library Director Sara Jones said that she would like to see the good deed go viral so it inspires other people to match or one-up Newell’s kind and funny gesture.

Marin County Free Library An employee of PeopleFun CEO Tony Goodman paid his overdue library fee from a book he checked out at Marin County Free Library 1972 and never returned.

Jones said:

“In a way, we hope hundreds of people find overdue books, become overcome with guilt, and get inspired to make peace with their local libraries.”

Jones added:

“It’s critical right now to support reading and education at a time when stay-at-home orders are keeping people inside and curled up with books. And it’s also good for karma.”

Newell presented Goodman with a receipt for the fine on Friday.

Newell told library officials:

“During a year when smiles are in short supply and tension has been high for many, it was fun to stop and do something silly. Hopefully, it won’t count against me on my next employee quarterly review.”

Last modified December 12, 2020 10:32 am

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