Download I Love Libraries Web badges for your site.
September is Library Card Sign-Up Month, and NBA superstar and author Kareem Abdul-Jabbar is the honorary chair for the annual event. Learn more on the I Love Libraries Library Card Sign-Up Month page.
What is Library 2.0? Learn the answer to that and more on I Love Libraries' Ask the Librarian page.
It would be hard to miss the building excitement this summer as readers of all ages anticipate the release of the next – and last – book in J.K. Rowling’s series of books about the young wizard Harry Potter: Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows. Couple that with a new Potter movie coming to movie theatres as well, and it’s no wonder that "Pottermania" has reached an all-time high.
Bookstores and movie theatres are clearly hoping to see record business from these releases, but local libraries are also offering ways for their patrons to celebrate the new book and movie. There are summer reading programs that include Harry Potter themed activities, and even special library or librarian blogs dedicated to Harry Potter (Enjoy the Magic of Harry Potter @ the Norwalk Public Library and Bloggin About Harry Potter from the Louisville Free Library).
ILoveLibraries.org spoke with Kathleen T. Horning, past president of the Association for Library Service to Children (ALSC), about the Harry Potter phenomenon and its effect on libraries. “Libraries have seen an overall rise in circulation, particularly in the area of fantasy books for children and teens,” says Horning. In addition, she says, “The long waiting period between installments has given librarians the perfect opportunity to suggest other good books for children to read in the meantime. Click here for recommendations from the experts on other books you and your young Potter fans might like.
Featured below are some examples of programs offered by just a few libraries around the country. Check with your local library to learn about Potter programming in your neighborhood.
|
Note: Response to ILoveLibraries.org's original story about Harry Potter themed library events was so great that we've continued to collect links to individual programs that have taken place or will take place in the coming weeks. Click on "Read More" below to read more about the programs libraries have provided or will provide in the coming weeks. Items added after the original release of this article are marked with a red "NEW!" If you want to share your library's events, visit the ILoveLibraries.org "Libraries in the News" blog and add your event to the comments. |
Harry - Banned! |
The Famed Knight Bus, which speeds through the world at night and picks up needy wizards and witches in Rowling’s books, is touring libraries across the United States. Scholastic Books has sponsored an actual triple-decker purple Knight Bus and sent it around the country, stopping in dozens of cities’ public libraries. Libraries lucky enough to be granted a visit are having parties and celebrations in honor of this magical tour. You can visit the Scholastic Knight Bus Tour site to learn about the tour, what libraries have been doing, and whether the Knight Bus is stopping in your town.
Many libraries are drawing out their festivities over several events. Horning says that “youth services librarians [can] use their creativity and their own knowledge of the communities they serve to enlist local experts to join the celebration.” With more than a week separating the release of the new movie and the new book, there’s time for lots of wizard-worthy public programming.
Some libraries are throwing fabulous parties late at night to release the first copies of the new book at midnight.
The fun doesn’t end when readers take home the new book. Horning suggests that families can do more at home, and encourages them “to read aloud, or to listen together to the audio-book versions of the series, and to discuss the stories in depth.” Many libraries are hosting read-a-thons for Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows—so take your whole family to the library.
However you celebrate the literary event of the summer, be sure to make your public library a part of the experience. As Horning says, "There really is no other contemporary author—for children or adults—who commands the same kind of anticipation [as J.K. Rowling]. And don't expect there to be in our lifetime. We have to enjoy it while we can."