Little Libraries, Big Impact
Poets & Writers Magazine|January - February 2021
Early in March a box was erected outside the Association for the Advancement of Mexican Americans (AAMA) in Houston.
By Emma Hine
Little Libraries, Big Impact

Orange and with a slightly pitched roof, the box stands on a short post and bears illustrations by John Parra from the children’s book Little Libraries, Big Heroes (Clarion Books, 2019). It is large enough to hold at least twenty books for neighborhood residents to borrow and read.

This box is a Little Free Library, the work of the eponymous Wisconsin-based nonprofit that seeks to increase both access to and love for reading within communities. When the organization’s founder, Todd Bol, first placed a schoolhouse-shaped box in his yard in 2009 as a memorial to his mother, he wanted to foster book exchanges among his neighbors. In 2012, Bol founded the related nonprofit, and when he died in 2018 there were more than seventy-five thousand Little Free Libraries in eighty-eight countries. In Bol’s New York Times obituary, his brother Tony spoke of the program’s success: “What was powerful about it was that all you needed was the idea... You just build it, or order it, then put it up in your yard, like a public art monument.”

This story is from the January - February 2021 edition of Poets & Writers Magazine.

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