Express YourSHELF for National Libraries Week

 





































National Libraries Week kicks off
today to celebrate the role of libraries in the UK’s book culture and promote libraries
as “spaces for reading, engagement, learning and creativity.”

 





When did you last visit the library?
Do you remember a school or class library from your childhood? If you have
children, did you go to the bounce and rhyme times? Or maybe the library is a place where you go to work and think, meet people, or even learn a new skill. People come into the library for all kinds of reasons, including searching for elusive bits of information and archive materials.  






















“Libraries offer a safe space, providing access
to digital & online learning, helping to combat loneliness and having a
positive impact on people’s lives.” – Arts Council for England

 

Research
shows that there is a correlation between getting families reading and children
enjoying stories with them doing better at school and doing better in life. So,
how can libraries engage children?



 



In More than a House
of Books",
a Podcast commissioned by the Arts
Council for England, Sarah Mears (Library
Services Manager, Essex County Council. Former chair of the Association of
Senior Children's and Education Librarians
) stressed that the most
important thing is the welcome they receive at the door.



 



The
library needs to be “ . . . an exciting and vibrant space that attracts
children. It's light, it's airy, it's colourful. There are lots of things that
engage them. Activities for them to do, interesting technology that they may
have not experienced in their own homes. But I think most importantly, it's still the books. Children love reading for
pleasure and they love being inspired to read new titles, new authors.”



 



Today,
libraries aren’t places of where librarians go ‘shhh!’; instead they are vibrant
community hubs where authors, illustrators and storytellers visit, arts &
crafts clubs meet, music and theatre activities inspire the imagination, and poetry
groups perform.



 



Regrettably, many libraries are closing, but some – such as the new
Manchester Library, which has soundproofed music area, and the Birmingham Library,
with its roof gardens ­­- are being imaginatively re-purposed and re-thought to
inspire the next generation to
use
the space to engage people both with reading and digital skills.”




















Libraries are filled with wonderful
new contemporary books to explore, and dedicated, knowledgeable librarians who
are thrilled to help you. You can check out a whole pile of books to explore
new ideas, discover and re-read favourite authors & illustrators, and even learn
new skills. If something doesn’t resonate, I love that the books come with no
strings attached – you can simply return them and check out some more –
for free!


 




As part of the campaign for National
Libraries Week, six SCBWI
authors were invited to participate in CILIP’s Express YourSHELF campaign and
make a video about the books that influenced us.



 



For me, books are like friends, so choosing
favourites was tricky!  



 



You can see the videos here at midday each day this week.



 



And YOU can join in too! Express
yourSHELF by s
haring some books that shaped YOUR
world by snapping a pic of your book shelves, too, and posting on social media
with hashtag
#ExpressYourshelf



 



The thing about libraries is they are there for all stages of your life and for the whole family:

 

In lower school, I went to the
library at break time to hang out with the books and magazines, and choose new
ones; I even made library cards for the small shelf of books I owned at home (mostly
birthday presents sent by my grandmother who lived in England).



 

The EARJ lower school library had a lovely central area
where we could read beneath the colourful papier maché elephant




In high school, I spent most of my
lunch times in the library eating my sandwich on the sly while hanging out with
my friends (we weren’t allowed to eat in the library). In those days, you went
to the library after school and in class to look stuff up in the Encyclopedias; reference books couldn’t leave
the reading room because they had to be on hand for all students to use for research. Strange, now
we can ask Google everything!



 



Now, I go to my local library
almost every week to get a pile of bedtime reading, to see what’s new in
picture books and check out nonfiction kids’ books for research. 


  
A pile of TRUE story picture books to pore over





There is
something comforting about being amongst all those book friends, the promise of
a story or a new idea or a-ha moment. You never know – until you get home and crack open the covers –
whether it’s the right book for you, but it’s ever so exciting!

 

I asked some fellow Picture Book Den
authors to share some stories of how libraries have influenced their lives, too:



 



Lucy Rowland



 



    “I remember my primary school
library the best – a calm quiet space
where we would be taken in small groups to borrow beautiful books. It was also
used as a spill-over learning area so we had some of our most exciting lessons
in there - music lessons, a craft workshop, a puppet show performance. For that
reason, the library always felt like a
rather special place
!” 



 



Jane Clarke



 



    “As I child, I loved
Kettering's town library. I'd rush up the steps, dash into the children's
section, scoop up armfuls of books, then
retire to a quiet corner to sit on the floor and decide which to take home
.
When I discovered new series, there were nerve-racking moments - would the
title I had set my heart on be on the shelf - or had it already been borrowed?
Oh, the joy if it was there!”

 

Jane Clarke entertains her library audience with a science activity







Clare Helen Welsh

 



Clare Helen Welsh enthralls her young audience

 



    “I
don't actually remember visiting the library as a child, which is a huge shame.
I'm sure we did and that it's just my foggy memory, but I vividly remember
taking my classes to the library as part of my job as primary school teacher.
The informal visits provided the opportunity
to pore over worlds and characters, words and pictures
. The times we went
to meet visiting authors, illustrators
and storytellers
were just as memorable. I'm certain they inspired the
children and they definitely inspired me. I now have the outrageous privilege
of writing stories that live on those shelves, and delivering story sessions
just like the ones I watched

 

Craft activities with author Clare Helen Welsh

I wonder
if I would have had the courage to make the step from teacher to writer, had it
not been for the possibilities the library gave me.
Of course, in these
increasingly challenging times the battle is keeping libraries open and keeping
them alive. But we must - a library is so much more than library.”


 

Pippa Goodhart

     “When
my children were little, a visit to the
library was the treat at the end of the weekly shop.
I think a lot of
people find the huge number of books on shelves in libraries daunting, and
don’t know where to begin with choosing.
Children just find the right shelves and get stuck in! But we do need expert
librarians onhand to help pair the right child with the right book at the right
time,
especially with those books that might comfort or inspire or
enlighten at particular moments in a child’s life. Or an adult’s life, come to
that!






















Pippa’s daughter as a child blissfully combining reading a book (from a library -

see the spine!) with a kitten, and her now as a grown-up, reading to baby her son.

 









I love using libraries now, at least in non-Covid times. I borrow armloads of books, but I also like
them as places to work
. Being surrounded by books and other people, heads
down as they work, somehow helps me to focus better than I sometimes can at
home.”


 



 



Gareth
P. Jones



 



    “The Summer Reading Challenge is one of the best things that libraries do.
Each year, libraries around the country encourage children to keep reading
through the summer. As an author I’ve had my books selected for several lists
(my Dragon Detective series formed
part of this year’s Silly Squad), and I’ve appeared at libraries up and down
the country to hand out certificates, celebrate reading and shake the hands of
local mayors (shaking hands - remember that?).

 

2020 Summer Reading Challenge



But
my most positive experience was when my son did the challenge. He had to sit down and talk to a librarian
about each book he had read,
telling
her what he had enjoyed about it
and what he had taken away from the book.

 

Gareth P Jones plays the uke and Steve May pens the pictures



Many politicians think that
libraries are old fashioned and irrelevant, but when you have seen first-hand how they bring communities together and the
positive effects they have on children’s (and the nation’s) reading habits

then it makes you want to scream #SaveLibraries from the top of the tallest
library.”

 

 

And here's a pile of picture books on one of my shelves. There are others around the house . . . As I've said, they are my friends.  

 

But I'm always looking for more -
AT THE LIBRARY!

 


 






 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 Do you have a library story? Share it
with us!







_______________________________________________________________________





Natascha Biebow, MBE, Author, Editor and Mentor





Natascha is the author of the award-winning The Crayon Man: The True Story of the Invention of Crayola Crayons,
illustrated by Steven Salerno, winner of the Irma Black Award for Excellence in Children's Books, and selected as a best STEM Book 2020. Editor of numerous prize-winning books, she runs

Blue Elephant Storyshaping,
an editing, coaching and mentoring service aimed at empowering
writers and illustrators to fine-tune their work pre-submission, and is the Editorial Director for Five Quills.
She is Co-Regional
Advisor (Co-Chair) of SCBWI British Isles.
Find her at www.nataschabiebow.com

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