National Libraries Day On Wight

It may be cold outside but a warm welcome awaits in your local Isle of Wight library as today is National Libraries Day.

Libraries across the UK will be celebrating National Libraries Day on Saturday 4th February 2012 with a range of events for library users and supporters to enjoy.

National Libraries Open Day at Sandown Library

As part of National Libraries Day 2012 on Saturday 4th February, Sandown Library is holding an open day.  There will lots of groups and activities in the library and if you join up on the day you will be entered into a prize draw and could win a £20 Amazon voucher.

If you’re already a member of the library, bring a friend in to join and get a free DVD rental!

FREE TEA & COFFEE SERVED ALL DAY!!

Check out other library services available on the Isle of Wight:

Click on the highlighted links above to find more about library services on the Isle of Wight.

National Libraries Day…

Is a celebration of the work done in school, college, university, workplace and public libraries to promote learning, literacy and the enjoyment of reading to all.  It is supported by a range of twenty-five organisations including the Chartered Institute of Library & Information Professionals, the Reading Agency, the National Federation of Women’s Institutes, library campaigners and publishers.

Library users new and old are being encouraged to go along to their local library and find out about the great services on offer – from book loans and homework clubs to advice on starting a business and how to get online. Regular users are being asked to bring a friend and give them the chance to speak to library staff and find out exactly what services are available locally.

National Libraries Day is a great reason to visit the library – whether it’s for the first time or you go every week. We want as many people as possible to discover something new about their local library and sign up for some of the great opportunities on offer. Even if people can’t make it to their library, they can still get access to a range of services through library websites.

To celebrate National Library Day twenty-three of our most outstanding writers have contributed to The Library Book, published by Profile Books in aid of The Reading Agency’s library programmes. The authors describe libraries real or imagined, past, present, and future – why they matter and to whom. They include Julian Barnes, Alan Bennett, Stephen Fry, Lucy Mangan, Val McDermid, Caitlin Moran, Kate Mosse, Zadie Smith and Nicky Wire from the Manic Street Preachers.

Kate Mosse said,

“The brick and glass presence of libraries at the heart of our towns and cities gives the unequivocal message that books matter, that imagination matters, that the principles of free and fair access to literature and education to all matter. The most democratic of spaces, libraries are places where anyone – regardless of age or sex or background, their ambitions and opportunities (or lack of them) – is welcome and on an equal basis and for free. Libraries are home to the readers of today and the writers of tomorrow”

Lucy Mangan recalled her childhood experience of libraries,

“I thought my dad was having me on when I was six or seven and he told me he was taking me to a building full of free books that I could take home, read and then return and swap them for more, forever. We trotted along the road – libraries need to be local so that paying a visit feels as natural and easy as popping to the shops, not like a big, extra effort to be confined to the occasional day when you have the time – and it turned out he was telling the truth. It seemed like a miracle and it still does.”

Alan Gibbons, children’s author and campaigner, originally called for National Libraries Day to take place, he said:

“The ability to read is at the heart of being a civilised human being. Research from the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development shows that reading for pleasure is the single biggest indicator of our social and academic success, even more important than our social class. Your local library is the place you can choose a book, use a computer, find out about local history, do research, attend literary events, access community facilities and so much more. Now here’s the thing, it is free to use. Libraries and librarians make a huge difference.

National Literacy Trust research found that that a child who goes to a library is twice as likely to read well as one who does not. So what are you doing on Saturday, 4th February and the week leading up to it? Can you hold a story telling, a read-in, a poetry session, hold a talk about the history of your town? Could you have a party to celebrate reading? Pop down to your local library. Make sure you use it, love it, join it.”

Source: National Libraries Day www.nationallibrariesday.org.uk website. 

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