Writing With Abandon

Reflections and ramblings about life as an educator, writer, reader, knitter, and over-thinker. Trying to do the writing only I can do.

An Ode to Public Libraries

I grew up just a couple blocks away from the St. Agnes Public Library in New York City. I remember my first library card, and all the amazing books I borrowed from there. Scratching mystery crust off of pages, but turning them all the same, eager to finish new stories, experience new worlds. From middle grade books to the dramatic young adult series I read (hello Sarah Dessen and Jodi Picoult!), I devoured them, borrowing stacks at a time.

When I lived in Madrid, I visited the Pedro Salinas library, found their tiny English fiction section, borrowing British editions of literary novels like Zadie Smith’s On Beauty.

Back to New York, I lived and worked in Washington Heights. I loved the children’s section in the library closest to my apartment, and took my third graders to the Fort Washington Library for a magical field trip.

A few years later we lived on East End and 78th, and I had the Webster Library just steps from my front door. I adored the used bookstore in its basement.

When COVID hit, I couldn’t take books out for a while, so I borrowed them from the NYPL and the Brooklyn Public Library on my Kindle. I continue to borrow books on my Kindle constantly. (The airplane mode trick is the best, if you don’t know it yet.)

The first week I moved to Miami, I set out walking under the blazing July sun to visit the main branch of the Miami Dade Public Library. I sent my parents a selfie with the three books I found and borrowed that same day.

Today I returned to that branch with my class. Though they weren’t initially excited, the anticipation grew. Parents emailing us that their children were begging them to get library cards in time, and would the e-card work to take out physical books, otherwise their daughter would “kill them”? Children bouncing on line before going in, as though we were going to Six Flags. And finally, the visit — in awe of all the information the library had to offer, and each of them finding a small (or large!) stack of books to borrow.

All but 3 of these poetry mentor texts are from the public library.
Day 15 of 31

Comments

4 responses to “An Ode to Public Libraries”

  1. Alice Avatar

    Amy, I love this post! My (school) librarian heart is so happy! I like how you make it a point to show how each public library “moves” with you in such a way that each is unique, yet a permanent fixture of each place you have lived. Taking your students on field trips to public libraries is a special way to share your connection, allowing them to create their own, with the parents emailing you about how their children were “begging them to get library cards.” What an impression you have made on those young readers. Happy Reading!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Amy Crehore Avatar
      Amy Crehore

      Thank you for your kind comment! As a reader and teacher, THANK YOU for all you do as a librarian! You do so much more than the world thinks you do. Thank you for making information available to us all ❤

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  2. Debbie Lynn Avatar

    A perfect ode to public libraries…love going to ours and yes…’I’m in airplane mode’ as I finish up my current borrowed book! 😉

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  3. Lee Ann Spillane Avatar

    Oh the libraries! Have you read Conroy’s My Reading Life? Your slice brought some of his library love descriptions to life. Love your library tour!

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