I Once Had My Own Literacy Program

(orig­i­nal­ly pub­lished on Can­dice’s blog, “Notes from Can­dice Ran­som,” 16 Dec 2019)

Last night, I wrapped a box for a friend’s grand­daugh­ter of the Box­car Chil­dren books I’d writ­ten. She is nine and into the Box­car Chil­dren. I auto­graphed each title, added a note as to why I am not Gertrude Chan­dler Warn­er, the orig­i­nal cre­ator of the Box­car Chil­dren, but a ghost writer, revealed a secret “East­er egg” that iden­ti­fies which books are mine, boxed and wrapped the pack­age in cheer­ful Snoopy paper. It took two hours to track down the books, auto­graph, and wrap. I loved every minute of it.

As I tied the rib­bon into a bow, I remem­bered that many years ago I launched my own “books in the class­room, books in the home” lit­er­a­cy pro­gram. In the late 1990s, I read about Dol­ly Parton’s Imag­i­na­tion Library. In her pro­gram one free book was mailed each month to reg­is­tered chil­dren in Sevi­er Coun­ty, Ten­nessee, until those chil­dren reached school age. I was so inspired, I decid­ed to start my own program.

I had vis­it­ed south­west­ern Vir­ginia on many school vis­its. My father was from Saltville in Smyth Coun­ty, and I always felt I was com­ing home. I’d seen the school libraries. Many had books that were out of date. But the enthu­si­asm of the read­ing teach­ers, librar­i­ans, and the kids them­selves fol­lowed me home after each trip. If only there was some way to give each child a book to keep, like Dol­ly Parton’s program. 

But I had no way of reach­ing indi­vid­ual chil­dren. After much thought, I decid­ed I would send a box of books to a class­room each month. The stu­dents would share the books dur­ing the school year. At the end of the year, each stu­dent would choose a book to take home. In 1998, Book Bud­dies was born.

At our new Bor­ders book­store, I chose 30 paper­back children’s books for fourth graders. Then I picked a school in south­west­ern Vir­ginia and mailed the box to a fourth-grade class. A let­ter to the teacher explained my program. 

And that’s how I became a Book Bud­dy to ran­dom ele­men­tary class­rooms in my native state. I filed paper­work to achieve non-prof­it sta­tus to make sure I was legal. I had an illus­tra­tor friend design a logo and print­ed sta­tionery. My license plate read BKBDDY. I was all in. 

I cut large muslin squares and signed them to add to each book box. Quilts with author’s sig­na­tures were a thing back then. I’d auto­graphed many squares for schools around the coun­try. I hoped my Book Bud­dy schools would send muslin squares to oth­er children’s authors and stitch their own quilts.

Month after month, year after year, I sent out box­es. I loved going to Bor­ders and care­ful­ly choos­ing the best books. I loved going to the post office to ship box­es filled with books and my hope that each child would become a read­er. I reviewed children’s books so I could some­times send hard­cov­er books. When I spoke at con­fer­ences in oth­er states, I men­tioned the pro­gram. Some­times car­tons of donat­ed new books land­ed on my porch. Our extra bed­room was turned into the Book Bud­dy room where I stored, cat­a­logued, and pack­aged month­ly deliveries. 

I kept records of the schools and class­es and asked only that the teacher return my self-addressed, stamped post­card so I knew they had received the books. Some­times I got pack­ets of let­ters from the stu­dents. I answered each let­ter, even the one from a boy who said he would read the book he got after he and his dad went for a truck­load of saw­dust. Hey, you’ve got to have your pri­or­i­ties. But as time went on, I received few­er class pack­ets. The SASE post­cards weren’t mailed to me. I won­dered if some­thing was wrong.

At the 2003 annu­al state con­fer­ence of school librar­i­ans, where I was asked to sign books, I looked up to see five women approach­ing. When they cir­cled my table, I smiled. They did not smile back. Their spokesper­son told me blunt­ly they did not need my char­i­ty. Stunned, I didn’t know what they were talk­ing about. Then I real­ized they meant Book Bud­dies, and they must have believed I was some upper mid­dle-class do-good­er from North­ern Virginia. 

I explained I had ties to south­west­ern Vir­ginia — my father’s side went back nine gen­er­a­tions — and when I was grow­ing up the only books I owned were 25 cent Gold­en Books. I knew how impor­tant it was to have books in the home, no mat­ter where you lived. But those librar­i­ans made it clear I should stop send­ing “char­i­ty” box­es. I ran to the ladies room and cried.

That fall Hur­ri­cane Isabel tore through Vir­ginia. Hard hit was the lit­tle sea­side town of Colo­nial Beach. When I learned the ele­men­tary school had suf­fered severe dam­age, I packed up my room full of books, drove to Colo­nial Beach, and gave them to the school. Lat­er, I was pre­sent­ed with a cer­tifi­cate of grat­i­tude. I was glad to help, but it was a sad end­ing to my beloved program.

These days, I feel dis­tanced from my read­ers. I don’t do many school vis­its any more. Schools plead bud­get cuts (though there seems to be plen­ty of funds for sports) even after I’ve cut my rates by half. I miss being around kids, miss their ener­gy and enthu­si­asm. I espe­cial­ly miss let­ters from boys who promise to read their new books after they go get truck­loads of sawdust.

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