Borrowed in Brooklyn

Compare branches

Pick any two of the 12 tracked BPL branches to see what they share, what each over-indexes on, and how their adult-fiction tastes diverge.

Or click any cell in the matrix below.

Selected pair: Central Library and Williamsburgh have a 14% weighted overlap on adult demand pressure (12 titles tracked at both, 79 at either).

Color scaleVery different (0–20%)Some overlap (21–40%)Fairly similar (41–60%)Very similar (61%+)
Brooklyn Heights
Central Library
Bushwick
Greenpoint
Williamsburgh
Bedford
Crown Heights
Flatbush
Bay Ridge
Coney Island
Kings Highway
Sunset Park
Central / Downtown
Brooklyn Heights746533936464851345245
Central Library7981465511699
North Brooklyn
Bushwick469413534364242364140
Greenpoint538414542525051404050
Williamsburgh3914354533364240384342
Central Brooklyn
Bedford366344233363643383336
Crown Heights465365236364353414546
Flatbush485425042364358374446
South Brooklyn
Bay Ridge5111425140435358424954
Coney Island346364038384137423339
Kings Highway529414043334544493342
Sunset Park459405042364646543942
How this works

Each cell is a weighted overlap: across every adult title tracked at either branch, we compare the lower and higher branch demand-pressure values, then divide the sum of shared pressure by the sum of combined pressure. Books with strong demand at both branches count more; books strong at only one branch lower the overlap. Diagonals are self-matches (—). Branches are grouped by region (North / Central / South Brooklyn) for readability, and only the lower triangle is shown since the matrix is symmetric. If a book isn’t in one branch’s tracked pool, that side counts as no observed signal — not proof of zero real-world demand.

Tracked at both
12
Tracked only at Central Library
24
Tracked only at Williamsburgh
43
Weighted overlapWeighted overlap compares demand pressure across the books tracked by either branch. For each book, we take the lower and higher branch demand-pressure values across the two branches and divide the sum of shared pressure by the sum of combined pressure. Books with strong demand at both branches count more; books strong at only one branch lower overlap. If a book isn't in one branch's tracked pool, that side counts as no observed signal — not proof of zero real-world demand.
14%
Higher pressure at Central Library
4
Higher pressure at Williamsburgh
5

Shared titles

  • One hundred years of solitudeGabriel García Márquez

    Central Library 66 +9 vs panel avg · Williamsburgh 66 +9 vs panel avg

  • The seven husbands of Evelyn HugoTaylor Jenkins Reid

    Central Library 62 +13 vs panel avg · Williamsburgh 57 +8 vs panel avg

  • The mirrorNora Roberts

    Central Library 59 +49 vs panel avg · Williamsburgh 51 +43 vs panel avg

  • Demon CopperheadBarbara Kingsolver

    Central Library 51 5 vs panel avg · Williamsburgh 57 +1 vs panel avg

  • TrustHernán Díaz

    Central Library 51 +8 vs panel avg · Williamsburgh 57 +13 vs panel avg

  • Jane EyreCharlotte Brontë

    Central Library 51 +2 vs panel avg · Williamsburgh 57 +8 vs panel avg

  • 1984George Orwell

    Central Library 51 4 vs panel avg · Williamsburgh 51 4 vs panel avg

  • Tomorrow, and tomorrow, and tomorrowGabrielle Zevin

    Central Library 69 +18 vs panel avg · Williamsburgh 49 2 vs panel avg

  • The Wager : a tale of shipwreck, mutiny and murderDavid Grann

    Central Library 51 +22 vs panel avg · Williamsburgh 29 ~ panel avg

  • The womenKristin Hannah

    Central Library 29 8 vs panel avg · Williamsburgh 29 8 vs panel avg

More popular at Central Library

TitleCentral LibraryWilliamsburgh
Demand pressureBranch demand pressure: bounded 0–100 index combining scarcity (up to 80 pts when 0/N copies are on shelf) and recent movement (capped at 20). When public holds coverage is high enough across comparable books, scarcity is rebalanced to 0–65 and a 0–20 holds component is added.AvailableDemand pressureBranch demand pressure: bounded 0–100 index combining scarcity (up to 80 pts when 0/N copies are on shelf) and recent movement (capped at 20). When public holds coverage is high enough across comparable books, scarcity is rebalanced to 0–65 and a 0–20 holds component is added.Available
51
+22 vs panel avg
0/1
29
~ panel avg
1/2
69
+18 vs panel avg
0/4
49
2 vs panel avg
1/4
The mirrorNora Roberts
59
+49 vs panel avg
0/1
51
+43 vs panel avg
0/1
62
+13 vs panel avg
0/3
57
+8 vs panel avg
0/2

Hover the column headers for the full definition of each metric, or read the full methodology →

More popular at Williamsburgh

TitleCentral LibraryWilliamsburgh
Demand pressureBranch demand pressure: bounded 0–100 index combining scarcity (up to 80 pts when 0/N copies are on shelf) and recent movement (capped at 20). When public holds coverage is high enough across comparable books, scarcity is rebalanced to 0–65 and a 0–20 holds component is added.AvailableDemand pressureBranch demand pressure: bounded 0–100 index combining scarcity (up to 80 pts when 0/N copies are on shelf) and recent movement (capped at 20). When public holds coverage is high enough across comparable books, scarcity is rebalanced to 0–65 and a 0–20 holds component is added.Available
IntermezzoSally Rooney
21
27 vs panel avg
2/3
76
+28 vs panel avg
0/7
All foursMiranda July
0
36 vs panel avg
3/3
41
+5 vs panel avg
1/3
Demon CopperheadBarbara Kingsolver
51
5 vs panel avg
0/1
57
+1 vs panel avg
0/2
TrustHernán Díaz
51
+8 vs panel avg
0/1
57
+13 vs panel avg
0/2
Jane EyreCharlotte Brontë
51
+2 vs panel avg
0/1
57
+8 vs panel avg
0/2

Hover the column headers for the full definition of each metric, or read the full methodology →

Distinctive to Central Library

TitleCentral LibraryWilliamsburgh
Demand pressureBranch demand pressure: bounded 0–100 index combining scarcity (up to 80 pts when 0/N copies are on shelf) and recent movement (capped at 20). When public holds coverage is high enough across comparable books, scarcity is rebalanced to 0–65 and a 0–20 holds component is added.AvailableDemand pressureBranch demand pressure: bounded 0–100 index combining scarcity (up to 80 pts when 0/N copies are on shelf) and recent movement (capped at 20). When public holds coverage is high enough across comparable books, scarcity is rebalanced to 0–65 and a 0–20 holds component is added.Available
My brilliant friendElena Ferrante
65
+9 vs panel avg
0/4
51
5 vs panel avg
0/1
Tom LakeAnn Patchett
51
1 vs panel avg
0/1
62
+10 vs panel avg
0/3
First lie winsAshley Elston
51
+18 vs panel avg
0/1
57
+24 vs panel avg
0/2
The alchemistPaulo Coelho
57
+3 vs panel avg
0/2
57
+3 vs panel avg
0/2
Normal peopleSally Rooney
57
~ panel avg
0/2
57
~ panel avg
0/2

Hover the column headers for the full definition of each metric, or read the full methodology →

Distinctive to Williamsburgh

TitleCentral LibraryWilliamsburgh
Demand pressureBranch demand pressure: bounded 0–100 index combining scarcity (up to 80 pts when 0/N copies are on shelf) and recent movement (capped at 20). When public holds coverage is high enough across comparable books, scarcity is rebalanced to 0–65 and a 0–20 holds component is added.AvailableDemand pressureBranch demand pressure: bounded 0–100 index combining scarcity (up to 80 pts when 0/N copies are on shelf) and recent movement (capped at 20). When public holds coverage is high enough across comparable books, scarcity is rebalanced to 0–65 and a 0–20 holds component is added.Available
The wedding peopleAlison Espach
0
~ panel avg
0/0
68
+9 vs panel avg
0/5
Martyr!Kaveh Akbar
0
~ panel avg
0/0
68
+6 vs panel avg
0/5
YesteryearCaro Claire Burke
0
~ panel avg
0/0
68
+1 vs panel avg
0/5
The correspondentVirginia Evans
0
~ panel avg
0/0
65
3 vs panel avg
0/4
0
~ panel avg
0/0
65
4 vs panel avg
0/4

Hover the column headers for the full definition of each metric, or read the full methodology →