It's November and while spooky season never ends, it is likely time to rotate your library's book displays out and feature some other titles.
There are two primary civic holidays that will be on everyone's mind - Thanksgiving and Veteran's Day.
For Thanksgiving, you can set up a display with alternative ideas for what to serve for dinner. Set up a "No Meat Thanksgiving" display with your vegetarian and vegan cookbooks. Dive into your cookbook section and pull out some options for people who want to go beyond turkey and stuffing (or dressing). Facing out cookbooks will get them checked out. It would also be nice to focus on gratitude and being thankful in general. There are youth titles on the subject including picture books so keep that in mind in case all of your Thanksgiving and fall books get checked out. Goodreads has a list of adult and youth titles. You can search your fiction collection as well for books which include characters learning about being grateful. A passive program could be to have patrons write down what they are thankful for and post them on a bulletin board or near your display of books.
With Small Business Saturday following, you could make a list of entrepreneur books both non-fiction as well as fiction about business people and businesses.
Veteran's Day can be a display in conjunction with or separate from the US Marine Corp birthday. November is also Aviation History month so the same display can include several themes if you are short on space. There is a huge amount of adult fiction with military veterans and war included but don't forget non-fiction titles about veterans and issues they face. If you reach out to community groups or your local VA, you can add information about service and support available to your display.
November is also Native American Heritage Month. Your non-fiction collections likely have books you can add but you can also focus on Native Americans who write fiction, including genre fiction. Introduce your mystery and horror fans to authors they may not be familiar with.
Seattle Public Library has a list as does Goodreads. Bookriot created a list of 10 Must-Read Native American Authors. There are Native American Young Adult titles on the Los Angeles Public Library's List. You may have books in your collection about local Indigenous history. The Lineup (a great source for backlist horror and thrillers) has an article about Unsettling Horror Books by Indigenous Horror Authors. There are Native American mystery authors. This list from Murder & Mayhem can get you started. There are romance novels by Indigenous authors but be careful about using older titles by authors who used outdated descriptions and offensive language. BookRiot created a list of Native American Romance Novels by Native Authors.
It's National Novel Writing Month or NaNoWriMo in November. It's a great time to visit your 800's in non-fiction and find books on writing and publishing. Include information about local authors groups on your display as well. There are also biographies and autobiographies about authors that could be included.
Diwali is on November 12 this year. It does change from year to year so be careful to check before you repeat a display next year. Beyond setting up non-fiction titles about the holiday and Hinduism, pull out titles by authors that use Hindu mythology or include Hinduism in the plot of the book.
The US General Election Day is in November which is a reason to put out books about voting, civic engagement, and politicians. There are also novels about elections.
There are two days you can use to focus on fiction in particular - Occult Day and Absurdity Day. Look for fiction with occult themes and group them together with a sign with a Ouija board on it. For Absurdity Day, look for absurdist fiction and perhaps even post signage with a brief explanation explaining what it is.
Three youth focused ideas for this month are: Have a Party With Your Bear Day, Turtle Adoption Day, and World Toilet Day. You have so many books about that last one. Trust me.
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