All posts by Mary Jordan

Activists skirt book bans with guerrilla giveaways and pop-up libraries

photo of woman reading book
Photo by Polina Zimmerman on Pexels.com

If you are even mildly adjacent to libraries, you know how we are currently being besieged by a small number of anti-book, anti-reading, anti-people fanatics. There are not that many of these pathetic little people, but they are noisy and delight in trying to sow fear and upset everywhere they go.

Libraries are all about freedom to read, sharing books, and letting people make their own choices about the books they want to read. Most people are in agreement with this idea as well – and the people who want to be able to freely choose books for themselves are fighting back against the pathetic book banners. Great to see!

Check out this excerpt of an article about a few strategies that people who want to support free reading have been taking! You can read the whole article here.

“The free speech group PEN America says book bans in public school libraries this year are on pace to top last year’s high mark, when there were more than 2,500 instances of book bans in U.S. schools. Most of those books were LGBTQ- or race-related.

It’s exactly why many people opposed to bans are taking it upon themselves to find creative ways to put those books where young readers will see them — outside of schools. Pop-up banned-book libraries, banned-book giveaways and even a banned bookmobile have appeared around the nation in an ad hoc kind of counteroffensive.

There’s also been a spike in Little Free Libraries stuffed with banned books. The number of those curbside boxes on posts rose during the pandemic and climbed even higher last year as book bans spread around the nation. There were 140,000 Little Free Libraries in 2022, up 35% from 2020, according to the nonprofit Little Free Library, which has been encouraging the growth. The organization says some 87% of its members report that they share banned books.

It’s becoming something of a cat-and-mouse game. As activists come up with creative ways around book bans, the other side is starting to look at how to quash those end runs, which only leaves activists even more determined.

“The harder they push [book bans], the more of these books are going to be available. I have a bit of a history with direct action and guerrilla theater,” Tritt quips.

He has already lent or given away nearly 2,000 books, everywhere from a flower shop and festivals to political rallies and road races. It’s been a lifeline for young people, he says.

“One family came in with a [transgender] teen and picked up This Book Is Gay and just cried,” Tritt recalls. “Their father held them, and they both thanked us so much. They didn’t know the book existed.”…”

“”What we are beginning to see after a year and half of really kind of being back on our heels is that the opposition is growing,” says Chris Finan, executive director of the National Coalition Against Censorship. “The [book ban advocates are] overreaching, and it’s making people mad and they’re getting active.”

Including young people, like 18-year-old high school senior Oliver Stirland, from St. George, Utah.

“What really got to me was two books that I had read that completely transformed my life were suddenly on the banned book list, and it kind of felt like a stab to the gut,” Stirland says.

He says a school librarian recommended the books to him when he was coming to terms with his sexuality and fighting thoughts of suicide. It prompted him to start raising money to buy banned books that he and others are slipping into Little Free Libraries all over town.

“If I can give one kid a book that helps that kid come out of a dark place, that lets them know that they’re not alone — if I could help one kid, that would make everything worth it,” Stirland says.”

Episode 10-05: A celebrity memoir

Reading With Libraries season ten logo

Welcome to Reading With Libraries! Thank you for joining us again on our book group and Reader’s advisory podcast! 

We are here to talk about books and share library ideas!

This season we are exploring all new ideas for books and book suggestions, so you can expand your reading horizons, and share more information with your library community. We are looking at prompts from the 2023 PopSugar reading challenge this season. You can read along with their challenge, linked in our show notes, or just enjoy some different books. 

This week’s books are such an easy genre to find, and to enjoy! There are tons of celebrity bios, covering all types of celebrities in all sorts of areas. They can be fun, silly, inspirational, and even life-changing. Jump into it with us this week!

Check out our show notes page for links to our beverages, our resources, and the books we share today.

Submit Your 2023 MLA Conference Proposal!

books on brown wooden shelf
Photo by Polina Zimmerman on Pexels.com

You are interesting! You do unique things! Your perspective is valuable!!

We say this all the time, of course; and now we emphasize this message because we want to encourage you to go to the annual Minnesota Library Association meeting! And while you are there, it would be wonderful to hear about the work in your library – so let’s do it!

Even if you haven’t been to this conference before, or if you are from a small library, or you aren’t sure your program/material/idea is good – this is an opportunity to try something! I would be happy to work with you on your application – and I can tell you for certain that the committee of library people from around the state (people just like you) will be happy that you sent in a proposal.

We are all stronger across the profession when we hear from everyone. That includes you! The conference will be in St. Paul this fall, so if you want to avoid a hotel stay it’s not too far for almost any of our members to drive over for a day.

Even if you do not give a presentation, it’s good to go to conferences like this. Most of our members are alone, or only working with a small number of people. At this conference, there will be other people who do what you do. They face the same issues you do, so you might be able to give each other ideas and to answer questions for each other! And, the people who do to conference are usually the interesting people in the profession – the ones who are doing cool things. So, there will always be someone to hear, to learn from, and to enjoy just talking with!

Check out the podcast episode Linking Our Libraries #209 that we made a few years ago, with all kinds of information about attending conference and presenting at them.

And this is a bonus episode of Linking Our Libraries, from 2021. We interviewed Ann Walker Smalley, director at Metronet Library System, and Ann Hokanson, director at Traverse de Sioux – both of them sharing ideas about the then-upcoming MLA conference! While that conference is over, it’s a good look at some of the things you might consider as you are thinking about your own MLA attendance.

Submit Your 2023 MLA Conference Proposal!

Presenting a content-rich session individually or as part of a team is a wonderful way to share knowledge, experiences, and ideas. The conference is an opportunity to present innovative directions, exchange new ideas, best practices, lessons learned, stories of successful collaborations, solutions to issues and more. We encourage staff from all levels, library types, and sizes to submit a proposal.
Submit your proposal today!
Call for Proposals: Opens: March 22, 2023 Submission Deadline: April 28, 2023

Session Length: 50 minutes (appropriate for 1-3 speakers)

Format: May include single or multiple speakers, panel discussions, case studies, interactive hands-on activities, demonstrations of projects, etc.

Call for proposals: Lake Superior Libraries Symposium 2023

Lake Superior Libraries Symposium 2023: Matter of Fact: Information Literacy in an Age of Fake News

The organizers of the Lake Superior Libraries Symposium (LSLS) invite breakout session proposals for our eleventh annual conference to be held on June 9, 2023, at Kathryn A. Martin Library on the campus of the University of Minnesota Duluth in Duluth, Minnesota.

This year’s theme, Matter of Fact: Promoting Information Literacy in an Age of Fake News, invites attendees to explore how libraries and library workers experience the unique challenges presented by the proliferation of misinformation and disinformation. We want to know how you’re promoting intellectual freedom and information literacy at your library. At LSLS23, we will be inspired to better serve our communities by promoting intellectual freedom and the pursuit of truth while actively countering disinformation and censorship.

Possibilities for presentation topics include:

Consider the Source

How do you evaluate sources for accuracy? How do you ensure that your collection represents the differing perspectives of the people served by your library? How do you respect copyright, know when and how to cite sources, and understand the social and political issues affecting information? How do you ensure that marginalized voices are included in the conversation? 

Promoting the Truth

How do you counter the spread of misinformation by actively promoting access to reliable, objective resources? How do you address issues of access or lack of access to information sources? How do you teach information literacy skills that enable your patrons to locate information and evaluate its accuracy for themselves? How do you raise public consciousness regarding the many ways in which disinformation and media manipulation are used to mislead the public?

Defending Freedom

How do you deal with challenges to library materials and/or resources? How do you promote intellectual freedom for the people served by your library? How do you defend the privacy of your patrons? 

Proposals for technical services and other non-teaching based presentations are welcome even if they do not fit the theme.

Successful breakout session presentations will be applicable to many types of libraries and showcase effective and innovative practices. 60-minute breakout sessions should include 10-15 minutes of question and answer. Panel presentations, particularly those representing a diversity of library types, sizes, and/or locations, are strongly encouraged. All presenters will receive a discounted registration rate of $25.

Breakout session presenters should submit proposals at https://forms.gle/PmKMBJ64oPjFiR6m8. All proposals should be submitted by April 7th. Presenters will be notified of acceptance in mid April.  

LSLS allows library staff to share their expertise, learn from their colleagues, and network to develop a stronger community of information professionals. Staff from all types of libraries are encouraged to attend. The event is organized and supported by library staff and educators from Northern Minnesota and Wisconsin; for a full list of our supporters, see http://lakesuperiorlibrariessymposium.com/about/supporters/.


For questions about proposals and submissions, please contact Leslie Mehle at mehlel@superiorlibrary.org. A complete listing of speakers, agenda, and costs will be released in April.

Celebrate Today! National Something On A Stick Day

logo for Celebrate Today's Holiday

That’s right: every week we are going to celebrate some small holiday! We want you to join us in celebrating every week – because really, everyone needs a little more happiness in their lives.

Join us in celebrating the holiday just yourself, and take some small quiet time to enjoy it. Or, take our book and program ideas, and celebrate in a larger way in your library. Take a small, goofy opportunity to have a little more fun today! (We celebrate you in doing this!)

This is a common idea in Minnesota; we take our things on a stick very seriously here! (Check out the state fair this summer for all kinds of tasty things on sticks.) This is supposed to be a goofy, fun day – so go as goofy and fun as you want with this! I, personally, am heading for a local cutesy gift store that has sticks filled with all kinds of gummy candy, and snacking myself into sugary bliss. You do you!

Here are a few books to try:

And the potential programs you can try are limited only by your budget and imagination!

  • snacks are an obvious option here; put together some wooden skewers and assorted things that can either be punctured and have small holes that can be threaded onto sticks
  • crafting is a good strategy to go here; find all kinds of things that can be threaded or run through with skewers or needles (be expansive in your definition of “stick”) and have fun with making jewelry and other art projects
  • assorted libraries, and library associations, have developed “things on a stick” training programs! google around to find something fun to learn today

Join us in celebrating the holiday just yourself, and take some small quiet time to enjoy it. Or, take our book and program ideas, and celebrate in a larger way in your library. Take a small, goofy opportunity to have a little more fun today!