Wis. man’s Little Free Library copied worldwide
Topics: From the Wires, News
In this Thursday, Dec. 6, 2012, photo, the nameplates for the Little Free Libraries lending boxes are shown in Hudson, Wis. The non-profit Little Free Libraries movement is branching out in new directions including inner-city neighborhoods where kids might not have many books and into developing countries were people are hungry for reading material and by Christmas expects its followers will have erected over 5,000 book boxes across the U.S. alone.(AP Photo/Jim Mone)(Credit: AP)HUDSON, Wis. (AP) — It started as a simple tribute to his mother, a teacher and bibliophile. Todd Bol put up a miniature version of a one-room schoolhouse on a post outside his home in this western Wisconsin city, filled it with books and invited his neighbors to borrow them.
They loved it, and began dropping by so often that his lawn became a gathering spot. Then a friend in Madison put out some similar boxes and got the same reaction. More home-crafted libraries began popping up around Wisconsin’s capital.
Three years later, the whimsical boxes are a global sensation. They number in the thousands and have spread to at least 36 countries, in a testimonial to the power of a good idea, the simple allure of a book and the wildfire of the internet.
“It’s weird to be an international phenomenon,” said Bol, a former international business consultant who finds himself at the head of what has become the Little Free Libraries organization. The book-sharing boxes are being adopted by a growing number of groups as a way of promoting literacy in inner cities and underdeveloped countries.
Bol, his Madison friend Rick Brooks, and helpers run the project from a funky workshop with a weathered wood facade in an otherwise nondescript concrete industrial building outside Hudson, a riverside community of 12,000 about 20 miles east of downtown St. Paul, Minn. They build wooden book boxes in a variety of styles, ranging from basic to a miniature British-style phone booth, and offer them for sale on the group’s website, which also offers plans for building your own. Sizes vary. The essential traits are that they are eye-catching and protect the books from the weather.
Each little library invites passersby to “take a book, return a book.”
Educators in particular have seized on the potential of something so simple and self-sustaining.
In Minneapolis, school officials are aiming to put up about 100 in neighborhoods where many kids don’t have books at home. A box at district headquarters goes through 40 books a day, serving children whose parents come to register them and adults who come to prepare for high school equivalency tests.
“I absolutely love them,” said Melanie Sanco, the district’s point person on the effort. “It sparks the imagination. You see them around and you want one. … They’re cute and adorable.” Kids who have books stay in school longer, she said.




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