Fortunate Collision Spaces — Libraries as Wellness Hubs

There are so many surveys going on at any given time in the UK NHS that it can sometimes feel overwhelming. One of the more manageable ways to interpret the results is to look at particular themes, including well-being in the workforce. Another survey that assesses well-being is the annual General Medical Council survey, which allows doctors to provide feedback on their experiences within the NHS.

This is a Defining Moment for Your Freedom to Read.

This is a defining moment for your freedom to read. H.R. 7661 would allow the federal government to ban books and regulate your right to read nationwide.

More Than 1,000 Libraries Celebrate Take Your Child to the Library Day 2026

On Saturday, February 7, 2026, more than 1,087 libraries across 49 states and Canada celebrated the fifteenth annual Take Your Child to the Library Day (TYCLD). Storytimes, scavenger hunts, LEGO builds, and visits from therapy dogs filled children’s rooms from Alaska to Delaware.

School Library Musings: A Day in the Life of a Teacher-Librarian (Part 2)

Walking into the library at Casa Grande High school in California each morning just before 8:00 a.m., teacher-librarian Nathan Libecap is often greeted by 200+ students who have been there since the first bus dropped them off at 7:30. Under the watchful eye of library assistant Yvonne Glasscoe, these students are completing school work, reading, or just hanging out in the largest classroom in the school.

School Library Musings: A Day in the Life of a Library Tech (Part 1)

For more than thirty years, Denise Britton has worked at a small, rural school in Sonoma County, California. She started as a substitute yard supervisor, helped in the kitchen serving meals, and then settled into the paraprofessional role of instructional assistant.

Libraries Are Solving the Food Insecurity Crisis

There is likely no insecurity more damaging to the human psyche than food insecurity. Its immediate and long-term effects make it one of the most devastating conditions to endure. This problem worsens exponentially when entire communities are affected, demanding intervention from organizations able to understand and engage with local populations. This is where public libraries come into the picture.

Books Behind Bars: A Small Idea Making a Big Difference for Families

Walking into a jail for a family visit can feel cold and tense. The lights, the noise, and the long security steps can overwhelm anyone—especially children clinging to a parent, struggling to make sense of the moment.

Libraries as Entrepreneurial Launchpads

Are you looking for a career change? Do you have ideas for the business of your dreams? Being an entrepreneur can be exciting, but it can also come with challenges. If you’ve been struggling to get started, consider looking into your local public library. To celebrate National Entrepreneurship Week, we’re looking at all the ways libraries can support aspiring entrepreneurs.

Preserving the Past, Empowering the Present

Author positionality: This article was authored by Tabitha C. Hilliard, a contributing writer to EveryLibrary on Medium. Ms. Hilliard identifies as a White, cisgender individual of privilege with a professional background in archaeology and library science. Ms. Hilliard’s experiences in the world have likely cultivated unconscious biases that may or may not influence the writing of this article, which introduces the importance of genealogical research for African-American families and notes historical barriers, and explains why library support is vital. Ms. Hilliard, recognizing the sensitivity of the topic and her own limited experience with African American genealogy research, invited Debra Blacklock‑Sloan — a fifth‑generation Texan and native Houstonian — to share her expertise.

From Solitary to Yale: How Books Helped One Man Reimagine What Life Could Be

Black History Month is here, and there’s no better time to learn about Reginald Dwayne Betts. He’s a Black lawyer and a poet with several acclaimed collections to his name, as well as a memoir. His many honors include being a 2010 Soros Justice Fellow, a 2011 Radcliffe Fellow, a 2012 Ruth Lilly and Dorothy Sargent Rosenberg Poetry Fellow, and a 2021 recipient of the prestigious MacArthur Foundation grant. It should come as no surprise that books and reading have played key roles in his life and career. In fact, as a teen, he was in gifted programs and was an honor student in his high school.