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"You should see the excitement when the new microbes arrive," said Charlotte Innerd, the library's reference and information services manager. "We'll be processing them in the back room and everyone's asking, 'Which ones came in?'"
Oliver will not disclose sales figures for the privately held company, but its success allowed him to leave his attorney job, move back to his hometown of Greenwich and run the business full time. It now has headquarters in Stamford, along with a United Kingdom office and distribution partners worldwide.
The microbes, which Oliver describes as whimsy rooted firmly in science, harken to his college days as an editor at the offbeat Harvard Lampoon humor magazine.
The toys depict each microbe at a million times its actual size or larger, and each comes with an often breezy but informative information card about their origins and avoiding illnesses they spread.
Each has eyes to give them a "face," so to speak. Some also have special features: tiny knife and fork embroidered on the chest of the flesh-eating disease's microbe, for example, and a black cape on the MRSA bacterium known colloquially as the "superbug" for its resistance to certain antibiotics.
"From the beginning they were designed to be whimsical, of course, with the eyes and features like that, but also scientifically sound -- to the extent that a plush doll of a germ can be," Oliver said.
Another category that sells well: the microbes carrying sexually transmitted diseases, often popular as joke gifts for Valentine's Day or on college campuses. Needless to say, Oliver adds, those aren't marketed to children.
"The idea is never to make fun of these issues or people who are contending with them," he said. "They can provide an approachable way to talk about what's otherwise, in some circumstances, a dry or very awkward subject."
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