To make your own book jacket that will cover, beautify, and protect a jacket-less book, try the following steps.
Category: Librarian
With limited shelf space, how do I decide which books to collect and keep?
Even if it is easily found elsewhere, like the public library, is it one that someone in my family or some of my library patrons will love and want easy, frequent access to? If that’s the case, then it’s worth shelf space to me.
How and why do librarians cover their dust jackets with plastic?
Some people find book jackets, aka dust jackets or dust covers, annoying, but most librarians want to keep and protect these covers on the books that have them for several reasons.
Kristi Stansfield’s Library Story
A few years ago, probably in self-defense, my husband installed a 12 ’x 26’ building next to our house, finished the walls, and provided electricity for the lending library. Life intervened with some unforeseen events, and I’m still setting up the library with a goal of it being officially open to memberships in 2024.
Mary Schubert’s Library Journey
Even before I was introduced to Charlotte Mason’s philosophy, I knew the greater value of narration versus multiple choice. During the summer months, I turned my children loose to browse the shelves of our public library for summer reading, to find whatever interested them versus what they were “told” to read because they could be quizzed on it. To this day, I still believe the most successful reading program is both reading to your child from conception and finding books that they are interested in reading.
Amanda Smith, The Community Hub
My goal is to be a complete alternative to the public library by offering a variety of Christian creation based resources including books, audiobooks, dvd, cd, games, and homeschool curriculum. In the future I’d like to add homeschool resources such as a laminator, comb binder, and science equipment like telescopes and microscopes. Starting soon I’d also like to add programs such as story times, summer reading programs, and book clubs. I want to have all of the resources that my family used at the public library. I feel that God has called me to run this library and that this is my mission field.
Where do I find affordable living books to add to my library?
Don’t get in a hurry to grow your library. Try some of the above techniques and places for finding good books, and add the books, a few at a time, to your library for the benefit of your own family and the families of your library patrons or future patrons. Just be patient and diligent as God gives the increase.
How do I begin to acquire more books for my library?
You may have been collecting books for a long time before you’re ready to open a lending library. If so, you may indeed know almost all of the tricks of the trade. But just maybe there are a few ideas for finding good, true, and beautiful books that you didn’t know.
Librarian Notices: Sherry Early’s Library Journey
With no grandchildren at the time, I just couldn’t see the books sitting on shelves or in boxes with no one to read them and love them… As the children moved out, the books moved in.
Librarian Notices: The LLF Library in Dallas, Texas
If you had known mom, you would know she would be mortified by us putting her name on this project, and we did refrain from calling it Little Lisa’s Library or something cute like that. But, sorry mom, we are doing all this because of you.
Librarian Notices: Building an Ark
From Sherry Early, Meriadoc Homeschool Library: Blessed are the men of Noah’s race that build their little arks, though frail and poorly filled, and steer through winds contrary towards a wraith, a rumour of a harbour guessed by faith. ~Mythopoeia by JRR Tolkien Like Noah, I am building an ark. My ark looks more like…
Shelving Geography and Non-Fiction History – Sandy Hall
Question: How can I shelve and organize nonfiction history and geography books? This answer is one of several of our featured answers. To see the other answers, click here. Sandy Hall of Hall’s Living Library Here’s my list of categories. Basically, it follows the DD system, just by category rather than numbers. Then I alphabetize…
The Genesis of Covenant Family Library, Elizabeth Jones, Librarian
We set up bookcases at one end of our walk-in basement, the end with the door. Over the years the library space worked its way around until it took up two thirds of the basement. My husband built nice brick steps to get people safely down and around the house, but on snowy days I had people come in the kitchen door and down the basement stairs so they wouldn’t slip and die.
Jeannette Tulis’s Library Journey
From Jeannette Tulis, Green Door Children’s Heritage Library, Soddy Daisy, Tennessee. My love affair with libraries began early. I was the youngest library card holder in Elmhurst, IL. I think the librarians had pity on me as I checked out stacks of books and so they relaxed the age restriction for qualifying for a card….