Showing posts with label Little Free Library. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Little Free Library. Show all posts

Sunday, September 6, 2015

Photo of the Day: Little Free Library, Englewood NJ



In a post last year, I took notice of a charming sight at the Chautauqua Institution in upstate New York: the presence of a “Little Free Library.” This free-standing oversized mailbox holds free books that people can borrow. Now, I’m happy to report, there’s one in my hometown of Englewood, at a bus stop only a couple of blocks from my home.

Two weeks ago, the Friends of the Englewood Library dedicated this nifty little spot, as small and inviting as a dollhouse. The box operates under a simple principle: If you take a book, leave a book. It’s there for a three-month trial period. 

(The day I took the photo accompanying this post, there was a small but choice lineup for all ages: Matt Christopher’s Wingman on Ice, Mark Twain's The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Anne Frank’s Diary of a Young Girl, a Mary Higgins Clark title, Charlotte Bronte’s Jane Eyre, Successful Investing, and Richard Preston’s The Hot Zone.)

A movement started in 2009, the Little Free Library now can be found in 25,000 installations around the world. Here’s hoping the citizens of Englewood take to it as readily as those elsewhere who have found it a great way to promote literacy and the love of reading.

Friday, August 22, 2014

Photo of the Day: Little Free Library, Chautauqua Institution, NY



The shot of another one of these on Facebook reminded me that I had come across a cute “Little Free Library” myself, in front of an equally quaint cottage, a few weeks ago on the grounds of Chautauqua Institution, the Victorian Era community in upstate New York where I have spent so many summers.

In its simplest form, the “Little Free Library,” wherever it pops up, involves a simple rule: take a book from this small box, but bring back one of your own to be shared. Its aim five years ago, when it started, was to produce 2,500 of these boxes—the same number as Andrew Carnegie's libraries. With 15,000 locations and counting at the start of this year, the "Little Free Library" is well past that goal now.