Read This Book!

#OperationReadAloud fills a needed gap for kids
By Mark Engebretson Lisa Von Drasek With schools closed and libraries shuttered due to COVID-19, children find themselves sequestered at home — many without enough books or activities to appease their curiosity. Enter Lisa Von Drasek, the energetic curator of the University of Minnesota’s Children’s Literature Research Collections. Von Drasek has created a social media campaign called #OperationReadAloud as a way to pull together children's book authors, illustrators, and advocates to record themselves reading books aloud and delivering workshops in writing and drawing. The content, aggregated on the #OperationReadAloud Facebook Group, focuses on children and young adults. As of March 27, the Group, open to anyone, has 580 members. Read alouds reaching children around the world “It’s all over the world — people are checking in from New Zealand — and it’s really fabulous,” Von Drasek said. “There’s also amazing gratitude from the people who are locked down in Italy, which is how this all started.” In February, Von Drasek served as a judge in Bologna, Italy for the 2020 Bolognaragazzi, an awards program for best picture books of the year. After Von Drasek returned home, she stayed in contact with her friends in Italy. In early March, she came up with the idea to recruit people to record themselves reading aloud for children in Italy. “I thought, ‘I know a lot of children’s books people. I bet they would love to read aloud from a book.’” Soon, of course, in the United States the coronavirus surfaced and started spreading. So the next step was creating the #OperationReadAloud Facebook group as a way to aggregate and share reading in the United States and around the world. Along the way, many publishers agreed to loosen copyright restrictions to allow their authors to share readings on YouTube, Facebook, and other platforms. “The generosity of the publishers has been amazing,” Von Drasek said. As of March 27, there are nearly 60 videos posted and they range from readings and workshops to “art-alouds.” Stemple, DiCamillo, and Grimes are contributors Heidi Stemple Heidi E.Y. Stemple, Kate DiCamillo, and Nikki Grimes are just a few of the contributors. “I wanted to do something special for the kids who are out there doing school and wanted some extra activities,” Stemple said in one of her videos, adding that she was going to read from her book, Counting Birds, with the permission of her publisher, Quarto Books. DiCamillo is focusing on writing tips for budding authors. She noted that the first thing she did that particular morning was what she does every morning: write two pages. Kate DiCamillo “So, what I’m going to ask y’all to do — if you are interested in writing a story — is to think: ‘what kind of routine can I get into where I can make a commitment to write a certain amount of pages each day for a story.’” To get started, DiCamillo recommended that authors pretend that they are writing a letter to someone. “So, just write the letter. And then we’re going to meet back here later on and I’ll give you another tip.” Grimes recently read from her book of poems, Between the Lines, which includes one of her favorite characters,