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March 3, 2024

Dear Friend,

Literacy  the ability to read is an elemental civil right that has not been extended to all among us. This horrifies me. I want to do everything in my power to make sure that every single child feasts at the bounty of words, stories, and ideas, and that every parent regardless of circumstances has the tools to make that flourishing possible.

Here at Book Harvest, we have quietly been building a program over the past 15 months that aspires to do that, transcending miles, and walls, and more inequities than I can comprehend.

This program is called Books in a Box, and it is simple: we work with children experiencing the profound circumstance of a parent’s incarceration by delivering free boxes of new books directly to them at home. Tucked in the box is a handwritten letter from their incarcerated parent, brimming with love, encouragement, and hope. 

Children enrolled in Books in a Box receive a home library of 20 brand new books, sent as two shipments of 10 books each. This program has thus far reached 81 children with 870 books (and counting!) across eight states: North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia, Tennessee, Florida, Montana, Missouri, and California. 

To my knowledge, this emergent program is unique in our country, and I would be remiss if I did not give a giant shoutout to those with whom we partner to deliver it: 

Melissa Radcliff at Our Children’s Place of Coastal Horizons has been our essential collaborator on this program  teaching us, guiding us, and providing us with invitations to family visit days. (Did you know that there are more than 14,000 children with an incarcerated parent in North Carolina? That nationally five million children are experiencing the effects of an incarcerated parent? Thank you, Melissa, for sharing these truths.)

The team at Motheread/Fatheread does the essential work of enrolling families and extending to parents the warm invitation to write letters to their children. 

And our own Perry Robinson has built this program from a mere idea into something I am deeply proud of. Along the way, Perry has made countless phone calls to caregivers, assembled and mailed 87 boxes, and so much more always with the utmost care, thoughtfulness, and sensitivity. 

Feedback from parents speaks to the connection being forged via books and across barriers. Among them: 
I hope the books teach my kids life lessons and for them to know that I will always be there and support them. 

I hope he gets to enjoy the satisfaction of receiving and reading the books. And that it changes his outlook on things in life.
Literacy is a basic civil right. And maybe, just maybe, it need not be thwarted by the generational effects of incarceration. Thank you for believing in our work  and in the deep love within families that, despite circumstances, can forge a culture of literacy that reaches every child. I would love to hear what you think. 

With inspiration and hope,

Ginger Young,
Founder and CEO
Book Harvest
P.S. My own education about the role of incarceration in our society has been informed by the work of Bryan Stevenson and his Equal Justice Initiative; a visit to The Legacy Museum in Montgomery, Alabama; the book The New Jim Crow by Michelle Alexander; and Freedom Reads, an organization founded by poet Reginald Dwayne Betts that “uses literature to empower people to confront what prison does to the spirit... turning prison housing units into libraries.” I invite you to join me in learning more. 

Book Harvest Expands: Books on Break!

Book Harvest is expanding! Watch this space for updates on our latest endeavors.

We are excited to announce that Book Harvest is bringing Books on Break to Haywood County, North Carolina this spring! In partnership with Haywood County Schools, 3,114 students across all eight elementary schools will begin their summer break with a home library of 10 new books -- building their home libraries and equipping them with high-interest books to help them practice reading all summer long.

Read the press release here.
Read the Press Release

Featured Five

This month's Featured Five children's books celebration Women's History Month.

You can purchase these books and have them shipped directly to Book Harvest. You might also like to have them in your home library! View purchasing options.
Questions? Email Amy Franks, Director of School and Family Engagement at amy@bookharvest.org.

What We're Reading & Watching

  1. Playful Learning Landscapes Action Newsletter: Spotlight on Book Harvest, February 29, 2024 (see photo!)
  2. From Schoolhouse, To Courthouse, To Statehouse by Mary Mathew, Book Harvest, February 28, 2024
  3. Perspective | Education is on the ballot by Mary Ann Wolf, Education NC, February 29, 2024
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