Reading all the way through summer
Lauren Vane
The summer reading program at the Huntington Beach Children’s Library
kicked off appropriately with a celebration of reading at the annual
Festival of Folktales.
The library’s summer reading program attracts more than 4,000
local children each year, and what better way to get them excited
about reading than a cultural carnival of games, storytelling and, of
course, lots and lots of books?
Principal librarian Nancy Williams said seeing the happy smiles
from children at events such as these is her favorite part about her
job.
“You just can’t beat that kind of reward,” Williams said.
The plaza in front of the library bustled with parents and
children enjoying everything from face painting to a bean-bag toss,
all the while bopping along to the music of steel drum band
Sapadilla.
The reading program began June 21 and will continue until school
starts in the fall. Children of all reading levels can participate.
Readers who register at any Huntington Beach library branch receive a
reading log where they can keep track of the books they have read or
parents have read to them.
When a child makes eight weekly visits to the library or reads 10
or more books, they are rewarded with prizes and a ticket to the
program finale, an end-of-summer concert in the park.
The main goal of the summer reading program is to encourage
children to visit the library and keep up their reading while they’re
not in school, Williams said.
“It’s fabulous; it’s a wonderful program,” said Clare Shweyk, who
works at the library and also has children -- a boy and girl ages 8
and 10 -- who participate. This year’s theme: Super Readers, Super
Heroes, is very enticing to the children, Williams said.
“It [the reading program] has a whole lot of cool prizes,” said
9-year-old Kelvin Leu, who has signed up for the program for the past
four years.
Before school let out this spring, the library promoted the
reading program by sending bookmarks to every child in Huntington
Beach, Williams said. Having parents involved in the reading program
with their children is important because it introduces parents to
quality children’s literature, Williams said.
The event is sponsored by the Friends of the Children’s Library, a
group of parents and community members who volunteer their time to
raise money for the children’s library. The volunteers play an active
role at the library and events such as the Festival of Folktales
would not be possible without their help, Williams said.
Last year the Friends raised $50,000 toward purchasing library
books, said volunteer Connie Tomsick.
Tomsick, who remembers her son visiting the library when he was a
toddler, volunteers because she believes the library is a wonderful
program for local children.
“It really is a gem of the city, this library,” she said.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.