The Humble Neighborhood Library: Why It Should Be Part of Your Book-Enthusiasm-Generating Plan

Since most readers don’t have an independent bookstore in their neighborhood, public libraries can be an ideal spot for author events.

Feb 13, 2025 - 11:02
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The Humble Neighborhood Library: Why It Should Be Part of Your Book-Enthusiasm-Generating Plan
Image: patrons are gathered in groups outside the Calabazas Branch Library Grand Opening event in San José, California in 2013.

Calabazas Branch Library Grand Opening” by San José Public Library is licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0 .

Today’s post is by author Kelly Turner.


I’m an easy target for an author talk. Truly, I don’t want to meet you for dinner, but I’ll plan a vacation around a book event. I’ve been to author events at bookstores, universities, and theaters. Until recently I’d never been to one at a neighborhood branch library.

While picking up library book holds last month, I noticed local author Jennifer Mathieu had an event at a branch library in my system to promote The Faculty Lounge, her first novel for adults (after seven young adult titles). I met Mathieu at a writers conference last summer. She was warm and approachable. I’d happily support her book. I was also curious about the venue—neighborhood branch? Not the Central Library downtown? The one with underground parking accessible via a hard right from a one-way street? I was game. I reserved my spot online.

When I arrived to the community room at the Dr. Shannon Miller branch at 2 p.m. on a dreary Saturday, nearly all 60 chairs were full. Houston independent bookstore Brazos Books had a sales table at the back. I took a spot on the second row. What followed was the best author event I’ve ever attended.

According to the Panorama Project’s 2019 survey of nearly 200 libraries in 30 states, about half of responding libraries produced ten or more events (including book clubs, speaker series, and author events) each year. Libraries hosting fewer than 10 events per year were more likely to host community book clubs and speaker series than author events. I can’t claim these data are representative of the (over 17,000) public libraries in the US, but given the American Association of Publishers reports nearly $30 billion in US book sales in 2023, there’s capacity for more library events connecting authors and readers.

The way I see it, local library events can help with two problems we face as writers and as people. As writers we’re tasked with a fair amount of psychologizing about our ideal readers: figuring out who they are and where they hang out. As people in 2025, we’re lonely. It’s an epidemic. Partnering with neighborhood libraries can help with both.

I don’t want to undercut independent bookstores, essential players in the book ecosystem. According to Jane’s article on public libraries boosting discoverability, while no formal study has been done, there’s reason to believe library events boost sales in area bookstores. (Libraries also buy the books they lend us.) I’m not suggesting library events instead of bookstore events, I’m pitching both/and.

First, your ideal reader might hang out in a neighborhood library. Most readers don’t have an independent bookstore in their neighborhood. For those that live near a library (or are voracious physical book readers), we might stop by our library by as frequently as we visit the grocery store. Libraries are low barrier-to-entry third spaces full of books waiting for us to borrow, read, fall in love with, and tell a friend about.

Second, about the loneliness. While Mathieu’s event was live streamed, the magic was in sixty people—sixty of Mathieu’s ideal readers, I would argue—showing up to the same IRL place at the same time. Mathieu began several answers in the Q&A by introducing the person asking the question—“Thanks for the question, Barb. Everybody, Barb’s my neighbor.” My impression was that at least a third of the audience was an acquaintance of Mathieu’s at some level or connected strongly to an element of her book (Mathieu’s a veteran high school English teacher).

Don’t mistake a casual, friendly audience with a polite, passive one. In addition to the event being well-attended, the audience was engaged. People had substantive, thoughtful questions.

Consistent with the Panorama report, many libraries offer author talks on the regular, but not the Dr. Shannon Miller branch. This was their first author event. Closing the event, the branch manager shared that a library staff member convinced her to bring in Mathieu after hearing her at a bookstore event. She went for it! They made print and digital marketing materials, expanded their community room to the max, filled the space and brought in Brazos Books to move units. Ninety percent of respondents to Panorama’s survey reported that book sales were a part of book events at their library. One participant elaborated that the area bookstore likes partnering with the library because it has higher seating capacity (200 versus 30 seats)—and employee staff time to manage events—than the local bookstore. The branch manager reminded us that libraries are here to serve our needs. As writers and as people, we need each other. Why not meet at the library?

And there’s no rule saying you can’t try other people’s neighborhood libraries. In Jane’s previous piece, author Nancy Christie mentions in the comments that doing exactly this drives sales in places she’s not well known. Jane’s piece includes a three-item list on what to prepare before approaching a library and information on getting self-published work into their catalogues. According to the Panorama report, 95% of responding libraries booked events with the author directly. In other words, it’s on us.

After the event, people lined up to get their books signed. What else happened was that people talked to each other. One woman asked me if she knew me from line dancing class. She didn’t, but I’ve always wanted to try it. I got the info and attended the class last night.

The woman behind me in the signing line was another neighbor of Mathieu’s, visiting the branch for the first time after a long stint as a family caregiver. Would she have driven to a bookstore 20 minutes away for the event? Maybe. But she didn’t have to. Afterward, she signed up for a library card.

As writers, as readers, and as engaged citizens, let’s not forget those ideal readers who cart home stacks of books each week and might be hungry for connection with their neighbors. Check in with your neighborhood library—what can you create to celebrate your book, someone else’s, or both?