Brooklyn Bookworms! discussion

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Jawin' > UB-DO (used-book drop-offs). Know of any?

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message 1: by Feliks (last edited Apr 05, 2015 04:51PM) (new)

Feliks (dzerzhinsky) | 149 comments Mod
What are good spots there to dump some 'book-crossing' books? Are there any?

When you gotta get rid of books fast, where to bring them?

Help us out with the 411 on this aspect of book ownership plz!

Sometimes you just wanna know that your old books are going to a good home, not just out on the street...


message 2: by Barbikat60 (new)

Barbikat60 | 32 comments Mod
http://www.freebirdbooks.com/tagged/home

New York City Books Through Bars

NYC BOOKS THROUGH BARS HAS THEIR OWN WEBSITE!!!
http://booksthroughbarsnyc.org


Freebird Books is temporarily hosting Books Through Bars while ABC No Rio moves towards the construction of a new facility. You can still reach us by voicemail or email through ABC No Rio.

Freebird is located at 123 Columbia Street between Kane and Degraw, in Carroll Gardens/Cobble Hill, Brooklyn. From the Bergen F/G stop, or the Borough Hall 4/5 stop, walk along Court Street to Kane, then down Kane to Columbia. Or, take the B61 bus to Freebird's front door.

Here is a map of the area.

Want to help out or donate books? We're at Freebird during the following times:

Mondays 7:30-9:30pm
Thursdays 7:30-9:30pm
Sundays 5-8pm
We are always looking for new books and used books in good condition on the following:

African-American history, especially 20th century
Native American history
Latin American history
Radical politics
Social sciences and psychology
Dictionaries, thesauruses, and Spanish-English dictionaries
Learning world languages
How-to (drawing, chess, sign language...)
Mayan and Aztec history
Memoirs and fiction by people of color
Mythology
Poetry anthologies
With few exceptions, we want only paperbacks since most prisons do not accept hardcover books, and they are expensive to mail.

We do not take: religious books, including Bibles; legal books (except legal dictionaries); old magazines (besides National Geographic); white supremacist literature or anything advocating racial animosity, sexism or homophobia; business books; encyclopedias; mass market fiction (such as Danielle Steele and Stephen King).

Check out our BookMooch account and send some points our way.

We also need donations of postage stamps in any denomination, and large catalog envelopes and supplies like packing tape and markers.

Want to maintain a Books Through Bars drop box at your student center, or collect books for the project at your workplace? We are always short of certain categories of books. There are other great ways to help get books to prisoners -- get in touch if you're interested in getting involved.

WHY BOOKS THROUGH BARS?

(And click here for links to other groups that deal with prison-related issues.)

By the end of 2006, 2.26 million people were in custody in state and federal prisons and in local jails.1 The vast majority are incarcerated in jails and state prisons. The United States imprisons 737 people per 100,000 in the national population -- a higher rate of imprisonment than in any other country in the world.2

Access to books in prison varies from state to state, partly because nowhere is it legally mandated that prisoners have a right to educational or recreational reading material, including through general library services.

Prisoners were denied access to federal Pell Grants in 1994. Most states eliminated prisoner eligibility for state tuition grants as well, and the number of college programs in prisons went from around 350 in the early 1980s to fewer than 12 by 2001.

New York State contributions to the corrections operating budget surpassed state contributions to SUNY and CUNY systems for the first time in 1994-5. At the time, New York ranked 45th out of 50 states in per capita state appropriations for higher education, even though the state had the fourth highest per capita income in the nation.3

68% of state prisoners have no high school diploma.4 In New York State prisons, there are about 63,000 people total, and 50.4% of them never completed high school.5

In 2000, over 20,000 prisoners in the U.S. were confined in special super-maximum security facilities.6 Many people in all types of institutions are put into solitary confinement as a disciplinary measure. Isolation and sensory deprivation have been shown to exacerbate existing mental illness in some and actually to lead to psychosis in others. In prison, especially in isolated units, reading peopleês stories in the form of novels or autobiographies or reading about current events helps stave off social deterioration and dehumanization.

New York State's prison system has the greatest percentage of people in disciplinary segregation, and we have the third largest number of prisoners in all forms of segregated housing (administrative, disciplinary and protective custody) nationwide. The national average of the percentage of state prisoners in disciplinary segregation is 2.6%, while in NY it is 6.7%.7

At least 95% of all state prisoners will be released from prison at some point. In 2001, about 592,000 state prisoners were released.8

A study of people released from prisons in Maryland, Minnesota, and Ohio showed that participants in education programs were significantly less likely to be re-arrested (57% of non-participants vs 48% for participants), re-convicted (35% vs 27%), and re-incarcerated (31% vs 21%).9

"Any discussion about reentry into society from prison begins with education."
-- Robert Sanchez, former prisoner and current program manager at STRIVE: East Harlem Employment Services10

Most people who write to Books Through Bars tell us that they are indigent and we are their only source of reading material.

1Bureau of Justice Statistics, Prisoners in 2006, December 2007

2International Centre for Prison Studies, Prison Brief for United States of America, June 2006

3Dan Macallair, Khaled Taqi-Eddin and Vincent Schiraldi (Justice Policy Institute), New York State of Mind: Higher Education vs. Prison Funding in the Empire State, 1988-1998

4Bureau of Justice Statistics, Educational and Correctional Populations, January 2003

5The Correctional Association of New York, Prisoner Profile, 2006

6Human Rights Watch, U.S. Prisons

72002 Corrections Yearbook, found via The Correctional Association of New York

8Bureau of Justice Statistics, Reentry Trends in the United States, August 2003

9Office of Correctional Education/Correctional Education Association, Three State Recidivism Study, 2001

10"Former Inmates Stress Education" by Herb Boyd. New York Amsterdam News, Jul 22-28, 2004.

Other Organizations

Philadelphia Books Through Bars has set up a neat national map to highlight books-to-prisoners programs all over the United States. (Boston's Prison Book Program includes a link to the latest National Prisoner Resource List).

Prisoners Reading Encouragement Program

The Correctional Association of New York
Programs include Drop the Rock, the Women in Prison Project, and the Juvenile Justice Project

Critical Resistance NYC

Fifth Avenue Committee: Developing Justice Program

Network for Justice: New Yorkers Against the Death Penalty

WBAI: "On the Count"

Real Cost of Prisons

The Sentencing Project

Prison Activist Resource Center

PrisonSucks.com: Research on the prison industrial complex


message 3: by Barbikat60 (new)

Barbikat60 | 32 comments Mod
I am most familiar with Park Slope even though I live between Park Slope and Sunset Park.


message 4: by Barbikat60 (new)

Barbikat60 | 32 comments Mod
If I find out about book sales, giveaways or anything related, I will certainly relay it to the group. I already posted the information for the Brooklyn Book fest 2013 in upcoming months.

I have donated books to Books through bars, it's a worthy thing to do. When I find out about anything else, I'll let you know. Judson Memorial Church in Manhattan has a Free Store once a month that you can give away your books there. If I find out more, I'll let you all know.


message 5: by Feliks (new)

Feliks (dzerzhinsky) | 149 comments Mod
Looks good! I'm always reading a paperback in my local watering-hole. There should be a lot more books present and available for barflys, instead of us always having to bring our own..


message 6: by Barbikat60 (new)

Barbikat60 | 32 comments Mod
You're insane but there should be books in bars. Drunk people are boring.


message 7: by Feliks (new)

Feliks (dzerzhinsky) | 149 comments Mod
hey! I resemble that remark!


message 8: by Gary (new)

Gary Patella | 3 comments I have lived in Gravesend, Sheepshead Bay, Windsor Terrace, and Bay Ridge. Book stores were not to be found in any of those neighborhoods (although the Barnes & Noble on 7th Ave. in Park Slope was two train stops away from where I lived in Windsor Terrace).


message 9: by Feliks (last edited May 16, 2013 09:43AM) (new)

Feliks (dzerzhinsky) | 149 comments Mod
Thx Gary.

p.s. I believe the restaurant 'Caeul' on Smith Street --being a literary-themed rest'rant?--has a shelf for browse-able books. Not sure whether they're 'user- provided' though; or 'management-provided'.

Bay Ridge has 'the Bookmarke Shoppe' on 3rd ave. Gravesend and Sheepshead Bay (the old turf of Sammy-the-Bull) I don't know enough about them. LibraryThing may have better info, under the 'local events' section.


message 10: by Barbikat60 (new)

Barbikat60 | 32 comments Mod
Hmmmm, asking coffee shops in bookstoreless neighborhoods if they'd consider taking books?


message 11: by Feliks (new)

Feliks (dzerzhinsky) | 149 comments Mod
Who's got the guts to do such a thing?


message 12: by Carolyn (new)

Carolyn Cochran | 2 comments I'm in Gravesend, and nope, there are no book stores as far as I've found. Also: no coffeeshops to speak of, unless we're counting Dunkin Donuts and possibly a Starbucks. This is not a "cool" neighborhood.


message 13: by Feliks (new)

Feliks (dzerzhinsky) | 149 comments Mod
Maybe its coolness is all kept under-wraps, on the hush-hush, behind-closed-doors...

Thanks Carolyn!


message 14: by Barbikat60 (new)

Barbikat60 | 32 comments Mod
There's a lot to be said for "uncool" neighborhoods. No bars, no hipsters and no overpriced coffee (except that Starbucks). How are the libraries in Gravesend, Carolyn?


message 15: by Carolyn (new)

Carolyn Cochran | 2 comments See also: no where good within walking distance to eat, at least half an hour train ride to hit the good grocery shopping, and a lack of non packed with cheap goods from China stores. No idea about the library; I there is one, never been - it looked shady


message 16: by Feliks (new)

Feliks (dzerzhinsky) | 149 comments Mod
I found one in Manhattan (a 'Bookcrossing' dropoff):

Charlotte's Place
109 Greenwich Street, New York, NY 10006


message 17: by Cobey (last edited Jul 22, 2015 10:13PM) (new)

Cobey Flynn | 3 comments Hi Feliks,
Here are a few:
In DUMBO, there is a great used, rare, and out of print book store called P.S. Bookshop. 76 Front St, Brooklyn, NY 11201 They take donations and often have amazing finds at affordable prices.

I also like to donate to the Housing Works Bookshop b/c all proceeds from my book donations go to a great cause. 126 Crosby Street New York, NY 10012 212-334-3324 Sometimes, the Brooklyn Housing Works locations in Park Slope and Brooklyn Heights will take books, but it's a good idea to call first.

Spoonbill & Sugartown books in Williamsburg buys your used books or gives you credit. 218 Bedford Avenue Brooklyn, NY 11211

I found an awesome used books section at Build it Green last summer, I'm not sure if they accept donations. 69 9th St. Gowanus, NY 718-725-8925

Thanks @Barbikat60 for the info on Books through bars!


message 18: by Feliks (new)

Feliks (dzerzhinsky) | 149 comments Mod
Great tips. I can easily get to 'Build it Green' from where I work. Wouldn't have ever guessed they stored books. p.s. I love strolling the Gowanus Canal area!


message 19: by Cobey (new)

Cobey Flynn | 3 comments I know! re:Build It Green. The books were the best surprise. I was trying to decide which early Margaret Atwood book to read: The Robber Bride, Alias Grace, or Cat's Eye. And there was Cat's Eye waiting for me at Build It Green. I'm not sure what the selection will be like since I haven't been back since last summer.

I have to say that my favorite selection of used books is at PS Bookshop. That's the store that I have bought the most books and have found new to me authors. I know this thread is about drop off, but I didn't want to steer you wrong, b/c no matter where I drop off books, I end up picking up books :)

P.S. I agree! Watching the Gowanus Canal area come alive has been really fun. For years, I used to say "look at all these unused places!"


message 20: by Feliks (new)

Feliks (dzerzhinsky) | 149 comments Mod
Yeah! I think what turned me on to the idea of exploring was the facelift to the transit station there. Prior to that, I don't ever recall wanting to poke around. It was an eyesore--didnt inspire confidence at all.


message 21: by Barbikat60 (new)

Barbikat60 | 32 comments Mod
Wow, I have to check out "Build It Green"!


message 22: by Feliks (new)

Feliks (dzerzhinsky) | 149 comments Mod
New place to swap books for free!

corner of 69 St & 3 Ave in Bay Ridge; coffee shop on corner.
'Coffee Grinder' (CG) Roasters'

some kind of chain of course, but they have windows/shelves filled with paperbacks and there's no fee to exchange. Hurrah!


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