Anonymous wrote:It can seem odd, that you are inviting kids on to your property.
An extreme example, a lady in our neighborhood put out soda and chips for delivery drivers. She lived 7-8 homes from the elementary school. She videoed the elementary kids who took items. Posted on the neighborhood facebook page that parents should keep kids off her property, the items were for delivery drivers, and she would soon be putting out Easter treats. The police were outside her house the next week, around school start time.
Anonymous wrote:NW DC near a metro. We are overrun with little free libraries. None require anyone to step onto personal property. They are all set at the edge so you just stop on the sidewalk and look at the books. I have not heard of anyone taking theirs down. While clearly some people put that should be recycled in them, overall they are well maintained and I have never heard of anyone having any issues with them.
Anonymous wrote:This is the first time Ive heard of a little free library. Are they really that popular? How do they work? Is it mainly children’s books?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not taking mine down but we honestly don't get enough foot traffic for it to work.
We’re on a corner. Ours gets a lot.
Weird thing, we ran out of the big stack of “old” books we had to get rid of, and only put about 1-2 books a month in it now, but other people drop stuff off in it all the time. It’s almost always at least half-full
Anonymous wrote:I don’t have one but I remember hearing that resellers will visit the LFL that are registered.
And so if you have an LFL don’t register it - so it’s for readers, not resellers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is the first time Ive heard of a little free library. Are they really that popular? How do they work? Is it mainly children’s books?
Have you been freeze-dried the last 20 years? Or in prison?
Anonymous wrote:This is the first time Ive heard of a little free library. Are they really that popular? How do they work? Is it mainly children’s books?