|
Politics & Prose Works With Dow Jones to Fill Lubuto Library
October 30, 2008
When global business news and information services provider Dow Jones &
Co. launched an employee book drive to provide more than 4,000 titles for a
new library that it's funding in Zambia, Jane Meyers, founder of the Lubuto
Library Project, believed strongly that those books should come from an
independent bookstore. The result is a partnership between Dow Jones and Washington,
D.C.'s Politics and Prose Bookstore
& Coffeehouse that will fill the indigenously styled library with titles
carefully selected to provide educational opportunities to Zambia's street kids,
orphans, and other at-risk children.
Dow Jones, which issued an award to Meyers for her international work, initially
suggested that employees make their donations through Amazon.com via a wish list
of Meyers' creation. Meyers, a former bookseller and librarian with more than
two decades of experience, had a different idea. "I've always been committed
to supporting independent bookstores," she said. "It's not just ideological.
At independents, I'm able to work with staff more knowledgeable about children's
books. They know that certain graphic novels would be good for our [collection]
and certain fantasy books would not. Creating the collection takes more knowledge
than you can have with a big impersonal system."
Meyers said that by relying on independents and handing over the reins to Politics
& Prose for title selection, she has been able to maintain the highest level
of quality control. "I've been insisting that our collections are as good
as anywhere," said Meyers. "They are selected specially for children
who want and need them, and they are up to the best of standards."
Sticking to her guns meant that a database and software had to be built to
function in a fashion similar to a wedding gift registry, so that Politics &
Prose could directly process orders from Dow Jones employees. The two companies
worked together to make that happen. Since Politics & Prose is across the
street from the collections headquarters for the Lubuto Project, there's the
added benefit of no shipping costs for donors, who also receive a 20 percent
discount on purchases.
Meyers worked closely with the head of the Politics & Prose
children's department, Jewell Stoddard, a Lubuto Advisory Board member, who designed the 4,500-title
wish list for the project, a task that took weeks. "We wanted to expose
the kids to all kinds of ideas and cultures around the world without the books
being too specific or requiring too much foreknowledge," said Stoddard.
Selections include a range of fiction, nonfiction, illustrated nonfiction,
as well as graphic novels and poetry.
Meyers hopes book donors will think about their act of giving, and how it will
benefit the recipients. "It's very important to us that people
understand what they are doing when they give," she explained. "We
don't want mindless giving. People often see giving a book as a really important
token, a more important and more personal thing than money."
Meyers is hoping to expand the Lubuto Library Project throughout Zambia
and Africa and is in the process of coordinating further partnerships between
bookstores and donors. Those interested in finding out more, funding the project,
or reading a blog about one of the libraries should visit www.Lubuto.org.
--Karen Schechner
Topics: News - Bookselling, Advocacy, About Bookstores, Literacy/Reading,
Printer friendly version
Email this article to a friend
ABA Booksellers: Discuss this article online
|