We hosted our first Cedar Park Reads last year choosing the book "One
Ranger, a memoir" by Joaquin Jackson.  We purchased more than 20 hard
copies and two audio books for patrons to check out. We collaborated
with our Parks Department and the Austin Community College in Cedar
Park.   The Head of the ACC's Criminal Justice department used to be a
Texas Ranger and knows Joaquin so he helped us inviting him as the
keynote speaker for our Grand Finale.  We scheduled events throughout
the months with displays from the Rangers Museum, speakers from former
and current Texas Rangers, book discussion at ACC and at the library,
and re-enactment from the Former Texas Ranger Foundation.  We took a
picture of the Mayor and the City Council members each holding the book
to promote the program.   F or our grand finale we had the author visit,
a western concert, a street dance and food concessions in a nearby park.
We had decent participation for all the events.  A little more than 100
people attended the Grand Finale.  The least participation was the book
discussion at ACC.  The other events range from 8 (due to thunderstorm)
to close to 40 people attended.  

 

 

Pauline Lam, MLS

Library Director

City of Cedar Park

(512) 401-5624

 

________________________________

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of D Ricklefs
Sent: Monday, April 19, 2010 5:41 PM
To: Barbara D. Hathaway; Laurie Mahaffey; [email protected]
Subject: Re: [ctls-l] One Book, One Community

 

The Three Cups of Tea was one of our best turnouts for a book club- 13
people (which is a good size for a book club) but it helped that the
facilitator for that book actually knows  Mortensen!

 

But I agree, go for it. Each community is different. FInd out what ticks
for YOUR community.

________________________________

From: Barbara D. Hathaway [[email protected]]
Sent: Monday, April 19, 2010 4:37 PM
To: D Ricklefs; Laurie Mahaffey; [email protected]
Subject: RE: One Book, One Community

I was very interested to hear the statistics for Round Rock's events.
We had a similar experience with a much smaller population, and similar
PR efforts.   We've done a One Book, One Community for three years now,
called "Lake Travis Reads", and it includes Bee Cave Public, Lake Travis
Community and Spicewood Community Libraries.  The first 2 years we did
non-fiction, serious-type books (This Voice in My Heart and Three Cups
of Tea) with low attendance at most of the events (5-30, depending on
the event).  This past year we decided to go strictly for something fun,
and did "Lake Travis Reads Sarah Bird," encouraging people to read ANY
of her books.  All three libraries had copies of all 7 of her novels,
and they all got lots of circs.  Various book clubs held their own
discussions of her work, and then the only real joint "event" we had was
the author coming to speak.  Despite a torrential downpour that night,
we had about 60 people turn out, not counting library staff & committee
members.  Not sure whether it was the light-hearted material or having
the author come (probably both) but it was by far our best-attended
adult event.

 

I would encourage other small libraries to try a OB,OC program.  You can
keep it really simple, and even if not that many people attend your
events, it still raises the profile of the library in your community and
gives you lots of opportunity for PR.  

 

Barbara

Barbara Hathaway

Library Director

Bee Cave Public Library

4000 Galleria Parkway

Bee Cave, TX  78738-6370

 

512.767.6620 Library

512.767.6624 Direct Line

512.767.6629 Fax

 

http://pl.beecavetexas.gov

[email protected]

 

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of D Ricklefs
Sent: Monday, April 19, 2010 4:22 PM
To: Laurie Mahaffey; [email protected]
Subject: Re: [ctls-l] One Book, One Community

 

THe RRPL did one the same time Austin did Bless Me, Ultima. We held 3
book discussion groups on the book and had between 6 and 12 at each
discussion group. This was maybe 10 years ago. We started it up again 5
years or so ago and attendance varies. We don't know the magic bullet,
except that Round Rock seems to like celebraties. We had Troy Kimmel
talk a bit about hurricanes and showed Isaac's Storm, the History
channel docudrama named after the book, and the book was our RR Reads.
We had about 60 people show up for that event. ANother good turnout this
year was tying the book to the Barnes and Nobles book club group that
meets once a month. We had about 25 or 30 at that event, about 8
non-library/non-book club participants I think. 

 

Otherwise, we have had only 10-15 show up for other events through the
years related to whatever RR Reads book we've chosen, and we've always
included the general population in selecting the title. 

 

 

And, it isn't for lack of PR-- we have Facebook, Twitter, website,
multiple copies to check out (and they ARE checked out all the time,
even with 10-15 copies),  in-house signage, adult calendars, a 3,000
email mailout the city does that discusses the RR Reads program, the
water bill statement that includes a newsletter-- can't get more
comprehensive in PR. We deserve a John Dana Cotton award just for the PR
effort, if not for the turnout. ANd, it may be that the power of TV,
with Troy Kimmel telling folks about his appearance, even at the 5:00
news that day, made the biggest difference in the turnout in this
market. And people did enjoy the popcorn and ice cream.

 

So, it is a mixed bag. Our adult book clubs that we hold each month are
lackluster, with no more than 7  or 8 people attending at the most, with
more like 2-3 regulars, even though we offer it both night and day.
We'll keep at it through the end of summer, and if that doesn't pick up,
we'll probably retire that program or just limit it to the summer when
we seem to have more attendees. I would think a community of 100,000
would do better than that, but with a growing list of other
opportunities for people to be involved with things, we may not be
viable in this area. We have the Sr. Center book club; the Barnes and
Noble book club; and a LOT of neighborhood, friends, and church book
clubs. And with 9,000+ attending baseball games 2-3 times a week on
average, time does get eaten up pretty good in ROund Rock.

 

Georgetown's Texas history/fiction book club does VERY well with over 30
people attending at times. It may be that theme that galvanizes new
people in town. I believe a lot of Sun City folks attend that (and I
know many of them).

 

If LInda S. is on this list, she might be able to shed some other
viewpoints on this as well. She even blogs about our book clubs-- forgot
about that one.

________________________________

From: [email protected] [[email protected]] On
Behalf Of Laurie Mahaffey [[email protected]]
Sent: Monday, April 19, 2010 3:26 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [ctls-l] One Book, One Community

If you have done a "One Book" community reading program, would you
please respond to Kim and the list?

Several of you have done this. She would like your ideas.

Thanks!

Laurie

 

From: Kim Kroll [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Monday, April 19, 2010 11:39 AM

Is there any information about how to host a Community reads one book
program?

 

Kim Adele Kroll

Director

Lena Armstrong Public Library

P.O. Box 120

Belton, Texas 76513

 

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