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DEAR LIBRARIAN by Lydia M. Sigwarth

DEAR LIBRARIAN

by Lydia M. Sigwarth ; illustrated by Romina Galotta

Pub Date: June 1st, 2021
ISBN: 978-0-374-31390-6
Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux

A love letter to a children’s librarian.

Title notwithstanding, this fond semi-memoir focuses not so much on how a librarian fostered a love of books and reading (though there is some of that) as on how a library changed one child’s life. Looking back on a time when her large, White family had no house or home aside from overcrowded temporary lodgings with relatives, the correspondent recalls discovering her local library. Within, there was space enough for all, toys and a puppet stage amid the shelves, a large window for people-watching, and a welcoming children’s librarian (also White, clad in a skirt and a fuzzy cardigan). The librarian was always good for a warm hug, listened to what she said, and made her feel “safe and happy.” Inspired to give others the same sort of “Library Home,” the child (like the author) grows up to be a librarian, and in closing scenes she appears as a cardigan-clad adult, tending attentively to a racially diverse group of smiling young visitors. Along with portraying both librarians as calm, self-confident sorts, Galotta enriches the nostalgic undertones with glimpses of lush flowers, tiny robots, a dragon, and other imaginary elements. In an afterword with photos Sigwarth describes the reunion recorded on the NPR program This American Life that sparked her tribute. (This book was reviewed digitally.)

A cogent, warming reminder that public libraries have always been more than just repositories for books.

(Picture book. 6-8)