How can she be sure that a neighbor who picks up the book uses it well? Maybe they put it on their shelf and don't ever get around to reading it. In that case, the guy with the car might be better at getting it to someone who will actually read it. |
What? My family has picked some truly great literary reads in LFLs. I think you are just a mean person. |
| There was a spider in the Little Library and that ended it being fun for the kids. No more. |
They don't have to read it or "use it well" -- all they have to do is return it, or replace it with something else. That's how LFL works. |
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I live around the corner from a goodwill store, and I pop in there a couple times a month. There is a woman who owns an antigues store who shops there and buys stuff for her store. There is a guy who buys jewelry to resell. He even brings a jewelers loop with him. There is a woman who buys nicknacks to resell on ebay.
My point is that, if you donate something, there is always the risk that someone will come along and try to make a few dollars off your donation. But the majority of people are not trying to make money by patronizing a LFL, or buying a dresser at the thrift store. There are always a few people who make me purse my lips, but most people are good, in my opinion. I hope that people who own Little Free Libraries don't get discouraged and quit. I think LFL's are a neat, sweet, neighborly endeavor at building community. |