…from Galway Bay.
Tag Archives: volunteer
Texas Book Festival Authors Announced
One of the things I’ll definitely miss this year: Texas Book Festival, October 27-28.
Matt Bondurant, H.W. Brands, Robert Caro, Tony Danza(?), Junot Diaz, Michael Erard, Jewel(!), Austin Kleon, Joe Lansdale, Jenny “The Bloggess” Lawson, David Levithan, Tim O’Brien, Turk Pipkin, Dan Rather, CHERYL STRAYED, Naomi Wolf, and several others.
Go, Texan. Volunteer if you can. Know that I’m jealous.
P.S. I just looked at the perks of becoming a member and all I can say is wow. Wow.
A Bookstore in a Library
Yesterday was my last day volunteering at Second-Hand Prose, the used bookstore inside the Georgetown Public Library. SHP is the cornerstone fundraiser run by the Friends of the Library, who also led the bookmobile campaign and host the Hill Country Author Series.
I have been volunteering once a month for the past 18 months, at first filling in whenever I could as a substitute, then finally landing a regular 10am to 1pm shift every fourth Saturday. Georgetown is home to a Sun City retirement community, which makes volunteering a competitive sport. Not a bad problem to have, if you ask me.
It seems counterintuitive, selling used books inside a library, but the store turns a healthy profit. Since the library provides the space rent-free, the store is staffed entirely by volunteers, and all of the stock is donated by the community, there is absolutely no overhead. The money gets donated back to the library, and it is one of the best libraries out there.
Volunteering at Second-Hand Prose can be dangerous, as the books are ridiculously cheap and there is plenty of time to peruse the shelves. I still regret the book I let slip through my fingers; a Texas Monthly Press edition of Bud Shrake’s Strange Peaches. It sat in the Collector’s Corner for months as I waited for the price to go down so I could pay for it with my $5 Book Bucks; then one day, it was gone.
Not too long ago, I hit my quota for volunteer hours, which meant a bookplate in a library book dedicated to me. The book was a work of juvenile fiction called Kitten’s Winter by Eugenie Fernandes. I brought it into the library’s coffee shop one day to read with my Literary Latte, and I found the story delightful.