
The bike and trailer arrived last week, and the maiden voyage to Costa de Jalisco on Barber Street for some avocados was a success! Many thanks to Brian Molloy at The Hub Bicycles for supporting literacy and cycling.
Bibliobike will provide quality literature to kids from low-income families throughout the summer in Athens, Georgia.

The bike and trailer arrived last week, and the maiden voyage to Costa de Jalisco on Barber Street for some avocados was a success! Many thanks to Brian Molloy at The Hub Bicycles for supporting literacy and cycling.

These are some of the books that inspired the idea for the Bibliobike. The first is about a boy in rural Appalachia during the Great Depression who is visited by a Pack Horse Librarian. Here’s a blurb from the publisher, Simon and Schuster:
High up on a mountain, right near the tippy-top, Cal and his family squeak out a living with their farm. There’s no time for visiting or reading or learning, and that suits Cal just fine. But then a woman starts coming around with loads of books for borrowing, and Cal has to wonder if there’s something to this reading after all.
A summer without books would be tragic for a once-reluctant reader whose love of books began during the school year. Bibliobike will keep kids connected to literature.




The following is a synopsis by Lee & Low Books of Richard Wright and the Library Card, written by William Miller.
As a child, Richard Wright loves to hear the stories his family tells, and he can’t wait to learn to read stories on his own. Because his family moves often in search of work, Richard has little opportunity to go to school. With the help of his mother, Richard does finally learn to read. However, they don’t have money to buy books, and few libraries in the South in the early 1900s are open to African Americans. At age 17, Richard seeks work in Memphis and lands a job as a helper and errand boy in an optician’s office. There he enlists the aid of a co-worker, Jim Falk, himself an outsider because he is Catholic. Falk helps Richard find a way to borrow the books he craves from the library. Richard reads everything he can get his hands on and knows he will never be the same again. For him, every page is “a ticket to freedom.” Soon after, Richard sets off for Chicago to make a new life for himself in the North.
Gregory Christie’s evocative illustrations capture the Jim Crow South superbly. Click here to read a conversation I had with Christie for Literacyhead Magazine in 2011.

Waiting for the Biblioburro, written by Monica Brown, is the bilingual story of librarian and teacher Luis Soriano Bohórquez. He travels with two burros loaded with books to rural villages in Columbia. Carlos Rendón Zipagauta directed a documentary for PBS about Bohórquez and you can visit Luis Soriano Bohórquez’s blog here.


Jeanette Winter’s book, The Librarian of Basra: A True Story from Iraq, is about an Iraqi woman who has been a librarian for fourteen years. When war comes to her city, she struggles to save thousands of books from destruction.
Mom drove me to shifts at my first job at the Camden County Public Library in Kingsland, Georgia. At the age of fourteen, my sole task at the library was re-shelving books. I hated it. At the time, I planned on being a professional skater or soccer player, so spending quiet hours indoors was the last thing I wanted to. It’s curious how things work out.
At the start of every school day, students meet a different morning message on the board that includes a creative image and music alongside the respective artists’ names. I discovered Bekka Wright’s Bikeyface series five years ago while searching for humorous cartoons related to cycling to share with the kids. During Morning Meeting, her illustrations spark lively conversations about crashes, college students with minimal driving experience behind the wheels of Fordasuaruses, bike etiquette and safety. This one always lights the DIY fire…

Bibliobike has reignited a fervor sparked back in 2003. Like Bekka Wright, Los Angeles was the unexpected setting of my reintroduction to biking. I pulled up roots that had been spreading throughout Athens since ’95 and followed someone across the country to a tiny apartment in Marina Del Rey. I bought a navy blue single speed beach cruiser with a basket on the front and spent a year surfing, waiting tables, reading and writing. In a sprawling city known for some of the worst traffic in the country, I drove less that year than I ever had before. Without intention, biking had become the default mode of transportation (when not riding a board of some sort). When I moved back to Georgia to teach and be closer to family, I automatically chose a place where I could bike just about everywhere I needed to go.
Hopefully, the Bibliobike will encourage kids and families throughout the community to consider getting out of their cars more often and begin shifting the transportation paradigm.

When Leslie Hale reached out shortly after the video was posted, she noted that Books for Keeps and Bibliobike share similar goals of countering summer slide and providing literature to children who otherwise would have limited access. As the executive director of Books for Keeps since 2013, Leslie has extensive experience promoting literacy. She invited me to the warehouse to discuss a potential partnership.

Between now and the end of the school year, Books for Keeps will deliver 60,000 books to elementary schools in Clarke County. Sans shiny display cases, the annual event is somewhat similar to a book fair. The major differences are that every book is free and every child goes home that day with twelve self-selected books.

When asked how the nonprofit decides which schools to serve, Leslie said it’s based on free and reduced lunch percentages, but they are “in the process of trying to reach every school.”
Books for Keeps purchases new books at a significantly discounted rate from Scholastic and First Book, a nonprofit founded in 1992 to provide literature and learning materials to those in need. For used books, there are many drop-off points around town, including Allstate branches, churches and other local businesses. Click here for a complete list of locations and more information about Books for Keeps.

Books for Keeps’ employees and volunteers will take a much needed break following spring deliveries to schools. After that, Leslie offered to contribute books to the Bibliobike. A section of the cart will be reserved for books to be given away at each stop throughout the summer (like a Little Free Library on wheels). Thanks again to Leslie and everyone else who supports literacy!
The Bibliobike video was shot and edited by Joanna Brooks on an unseasonably warm afternoon in late February. Music includes Japancakes’ Vocode-Inn, Dinosaur Jr.’s cover of Just Like Heaven and Maserati’s Show Me the Season.
Vocode-Inn
Just Like Heaven
Show Me the Season
To reach out to Joanna for all things visually creative, visit www.joannabrooksfilms.com.

Once the video was uploaded and shared, total donations went from zero to over six thousand dollars within twenty four hours. Thank you to everyone for the incredible outpouring of support!