I'm a librarian from Denmark and I was unemployed for more than two years. I got a job one year ago, with some help from a Danish company called Specialisterne. They helped me to find a job that mixes IT and library science.
I'm working at a large pharmaceutical company in Denmark. I do some publishing, some archive-work, and some tedious office tasks. It's much better than working at an actual library.
Try applying for jobs in the so-called Regulatory Affairs. It is mostly administrative work, sitting in a quiet office and doing tasks all day. Sometimes we go to meeting, but I am not required to say anything.
In Regulatory Affairs, there are A LOT of documentation, and it helps if you have a library degree.
Public libraries are great places to work, but you have to like people, and be a very calm person at all times.
I don't regret my library education, but it is very, very difficult to keep a steady job, and you have to be good at other things: communication, IT and talking to people.
You should also be good at reading and understanding texts that doesn't interest you. Not just books about your special interest, but real texts for real people: The "grey literature" than flows around in information-heavy companies like a pharmaceutical company or any other large company.
I think the librarian profession were more aspie-friendly some years ago. Or maybe it's just me.
Good luck applying for library jobs. Remember that you don't have to apply for jobs in libraries. You can take your knowledge anywhere. Just make sure that there are a lot of academics in the job, who are too busy working to actually keep track of their own documents.