First Annual Picture Book Fair

Sometime last fall, I had the idea to host a picture book fair here at the library. From my planning document: “Big Idea: Invite lots of local picture book authors/illustrators to SHPL in spring 2026 for a picture book fair! Each author will have ~15 minutes to read from their book (or do a drawing demo or other activity); all will have the opportunity to chat with readers and sell copies of their book.” And earlier this month, that’s exactly what happened! It went well enough that I’m already thinking of next year’s event…

But first, here are some details, so that you, too, can host a picture book fair at your library or bookstore:Author Christina Uss with a walrus puppet and her book, The Island Before No

  • Figure out a date and time. I chose the Saturday of Mass Kids Lit Fest so the event would have additional promotion from the Massachusetts Center for the Book; it appeared on their online calendar and promotional materials, and they shared editable graphics in Canva that I could customize. This also gave me half a year to…
  • Identify local authors and illustrators to invite, and check in with the local bookstore. Western Massachusetts is rich in kidlit creators (so is Eastern Mass, actually), and I couldn’t invite everyone I wanted, because my library is only open from 9:30am-1pm on Saturdays. I invited ten, and got seven, which was perfect! And our local bookstore, Odyssey, is a fantastic partner; their children’s book buyer brainstormed with me, ordered extra copies of the authors’ books, and showed up on the day of the fair with books to sell.
  • Author questionnaire: I asked for basic info: name, pronouns, short biography, headshot, which of their books they were planning to read, any other activities they wanted to do during their time, and any supplies they would need. Closer to the event, I asked about scheduling preferences. Fortunately, I was working with a delightful group, nearly all of whom stayed for the whole fair, which made scheduling fairly easy (but make sure your lead-off person is okay going first!).Flyer for Mass Kids Lit Fest Picture Book Fair with book covers
  • Advertise: The Mass Center for the Book promoted the event, and it was also on our library website, calendar, and social media. The bookshop posted flyers, and I shared a digital copy with all the public schools in town, as well as the youth librarian listserv so other nearby libraries could help spread the word. I mentioned it up at every other library program in the weeks leading up to the fair, and I talked to a reporter at one of the local papers.
  • Incentives: I made a “collect ’em all” half-sheet with each author’s headshot so kids could collect their signatures (or a stamp or a sticker or a mini drawing); kids who met every author could enter a prize drawing to win a bookstore gift certificate or a copy of one of the author’s books. (These were generously donated by the bookstore and the author, respectively).Autograph page for authors, with headshots and names
  • Setup: We decided to use the storytime room for the read-alouds, and set up the bookstore table and meet-the-authors tables in the general children’s area, which involved moving the train table and flannel board easel, bringing in extra tables, and converting the coloring table to a “make your own bookmark” station. If you can, designate a quiet space people can go if the fair is overstimulating; I reserved one of the library’s other rooms.
  • Week before the event stuff: Confirm final schedule with authors; collect or request library copies of the authors’ books to display; print and cut the “collect ’em all” autograph pages/raffle entries; make a raffle entry box; make table tents with the authors’ names to welcome them; cut lengths of ribbon to loop through the bookmark holes; gather clipboards, paper, and crayons for a draw-along; set up the easel and big paper for the author/illustrator’s drawing demo; print custom coloring sheets; schedule extra social media posts; print author bios and schedule.

On the day of the fair, the weather cooperated: it rained! (Indoor activity, anyone?) By the time the rooms were set up and the bookshop folks and authors were here, 26 visitors were ready for storytime. The whole event ran on time; 15 minutes is just about enough for an introduction, a story, and a couple of questions. Twenty minutes, or more generous breaks between readings, could certainly work, although longer breaks might disrupt the momentum. We had such a tight time frame (seven authors in two and a half hours) that we had to do it this way, and it worked out pretty well! Guests, authors, and booksellers all seemed happy.

  • Follow up: Make sure to THANK THE AUTHORS and the booksellers, in person and by email! If I’d thought about it in time, I would have baked cookies the night before. (Obviously, if you have the budget to pay an honorarium, I’m sure that would be appreciated!) Post to social media and tag partner organizations. Ask the authors if they have any author/illustrator friends who might be interested in participating next time. Thank everyone again. Go home and change into pajamas and read on the couch with your dog for the rest of the day.
Booksellers, authors, and librarian lined up behind a table
Left to right: Odyssey bookseller Laure, author Nicholas Day, librarian Jenny, authors Mk Smith Despres, Mara Rockliff, Jeff Mack, Christina Uss, Vicki Johnson, and Odyssey bookseller Ana (not pictured: Britt Crow-Miller)

April recap

What if everyone helped clean up the world a little bit? What if you showed up for a birthday party a day late? What if you could save a horse that was headed to the slaughterhouse? What if your slam poem went viral? What if cities were designed for people instead of cars? What if you thought the other person tied up the houseboat and now you’re at sea? What if you really just don’t want to put on shoes today?

What if, what if, what if…a better world was possible?

Here are some of the books I enjoyed most during the month of April:

Picture BooksCover image of While We're Here

  • More Than A Tree by Sarah Kurpiel (really captures the sadness and loss when a beloved tree has to come down)
  • Because of a Shoe by Julie Fogliano and Marla Frazee (why haven’t these two done something together until now? Brilliant pairing. Big feelings.)
  • Ripples by Katie Yamasaki (more muralists illustrating picture books, please!)
  • While We’re Here by Anne Wynter and Micha Archer (I actually gasped out loud in the middle of this book. Read it yourself and guess where. And oh I love Micha’s collage so much)
  • Robin and the Stick by E.B. Goodale (for every kid who loves to collect sticks)
  • A Book of Maps for You by Lourdes Heuer and Maxwell Eaton III (an inventive, heartfelt, kid’s-eye-view book about moving)

Middle GradeCover image of Benny on the Case

  • Phoenix by Kimberly Brubaker Bradley (as a Horse Girl, I would have loved this as a kid…but I love it now too)
  • Froggy: A Pond Full of Pals by Paige Walsh (SO funny. Reminded me a bit of Batcat, which is so snarky and silly and genuine)
  • Benny on the Case by Wesley King (read this with the homeschool book group at the library, and it’s an MCBA book for 2026-2027! Not a ton of books set in Newfoundland – this is a great one!)
  • Greenwild: The City Beyond the Sea by Pari Thompson (an excellent second book in the trilogy)

Young AdultCover image of A Better World Is Possible

  • A Better World Is Possible: Global Youth Confront the Climate Crisis by Meena Subramanian and Danica Novgorodoff
  • Truth Is by Hannah V. Sawyerr (see also: The Poet X by Elizabeth Acevedo)

Adult

  • Swept Away by Beth O’Leary (what happens when your one night stand turns into two weeks because you didn’t tie up the houseboat?)
  • The Keeper by Tana French (When I get a new Tana French book in my hands, please don’t talk to me until I am finished. I’ll be with you shortly.)
  • Frog: And Other Essays by Anne FadimanCover image of Life After Cars
  • Life After Cars by Sarah Goodyear, Doug Gordon, and Aaron Naparstek (the sentence from this that has stuck with me: “cities aren’t loud, cars are loud.” And the idea that we could/should design cities to accommodate humans, not cars.)
  • Bug Hollow by Michelle Huneven (multiple narrators with big jumps in time between them; reminded me a little of Ann Patchett’s The Patron Saint of Liars)
  • How to Be Okay When Nothing Is Okay by Jenny Lawson
  • Cherry Baby by Rainbow Rowell