Reading through Shared Books

By | August 7, 2016

I saved an article from last spring by Jamie Littlefield entitled, Promote Reading: Share Books. Here are a few of her suggestions that bear repeating.

The bad news:

21,000,000 Americans can’t read…

45,000,000 Americans are marginally illiterate…

Fewer than 1/2 of Americans read literature…

In some libraries, the copyright date on non fiction books is 1982…

 

The good news:

Kids who read at a young age are less likely to drop out of school…

Literary readers are 2 1/2 times more likely to attend cultural events…

Jamie Littlefield’s suggestions:

  1. Be an example by reading, sharing book ideas and visiting the library.
  2. Start a lending library by allowing people to borrow your books. Create a readily available space, fill a box with books and you’re in busness. Remember you’ll need to devise a check-out card, a sign-in sheet, etc where they sign their name and phone number so you can track the books out on loan.
  3. Give books as gifts.
  4. Donate books to schools, classrooms and homeless shelters.

Other ideas: Checkout the following sites

LibraryThing.com

PaperBackBookSwap.com

FrugalReader.com

BookCrossing.com

Whether you go a step further and build a ‘little library’ or try any of these ideas, I hope you think about how important reading is to/for all of us. Starting with reading to babies and onto reading with the elderly and everyone in between, reading matters.