"A library outranks any other one thing a community can do to benefit its people. It is a never failing spring in the desert." -Andrew Carnegie
Wednesday, March 14, 2012
Monday, March 12, 2012
World Book Night Comes to Lawton
On April 23, 2012, several
Lawtonians will join tens of thousands of people in the United States, as well
as the United Kingdom and Ireland, in giving out free paperback books, courtesy
of World Book Night USA, to spread the joy and love of reading. Volunteers have signed up online on the WBN
site to distribute books on April 23 in the Lawton area to those who don’t read
much, or who don’t readily have access to books.
The WBN sign-up process
required volunteers to choose a book from a list of 30 available titles, state
their purpose in participating in WBN, and
declare their plan for distributing books. WBN books are specially-produced,
not-for-resale paperbacks. Book givers will receive 20 copies of the same book,
a book they love from the list of 30 picks. The free books will be shipped to a
local distribution point, in this case the Lawton Public Library, where
volunteers will pick them up.
The library will host a
Pick-Up Party for participants to collect their books and discuss their plans
for distributing. Date and time for the
Pick-Up Party will be announced after the library has been informed of the anticipated
delivery date by WBN early in April.
There is no charge for these
special, not-for-resale editions, not for the library, the book giver, or the
recipient. These books cannot be resold in any fashion. Authors are foregoing royalties to make this
possible, and American book publishers, the American Booksellers Association,
Barnes and Noble, the American Library Association, the Association of American
Publishers, Ingram Book Company, UPS, and a dozen printers and binders have
paid for the production and shipping.
WBN is primarily intended to be
promoted on a person-to-person basis in the volunteer’s community. The book
givers are the reading ambassadors, spreading the word locally in thousands of
individual interactions and celebrations of reading and giving that day. The WBN organization encourages the givers
themselves to use social media, such as Facebook and Twitter, to communicate
their excitement about being able to give away free books, to tell about their
plans for distributing the books, and to describe how their day went, as well
as share photos if possible.
WBN originated in the U.K. in 2011. WBN USA joined the U.K. movement this
year; the WBN organization hopes to
spread to more countries in future years.WBN is an offshoot of World Book and Copyright Day, long celebrated by the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization, or UNESCO, on April 23, to promote reading, publishing and the protection of intellectual property through copyright. The date of April 23 was chosen because it is the acknowledged date on which, in the same year of 1616, Miguel Cervantes and William Shakespeare died. April 23 is also Shakespeare’s birthday, and the date of birth or death of other prominent authors such as Inca Garilaso de la Vega, Maurice Druon, Vladimir Nabokov, Josep Pla, and Manuel Mejía Vallejo. UNESCO's General Conference pay world-wide tribute to books and authors on this date, encouraging everyone, and in particular young people, to discover the pleasure of reading and gain a renewed respect for the irreplaceable contributions of those who have furthered the social and cultural progress of humanity.
More
information about World Book Night in the United States may be found at http://www.us.worldbooknight.org,
on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/worldbooknightusa,
or on Twitter at @wbnamerica
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