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Books to Prisoners

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Ornamental image of books
Books to Prisoners provides literacy resources for inmates

Books to Prisoners is an umbrella term for organizations that mail free reading material to prison inmates.

Background

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The first Books to Prisoners projects were founded in the early 1970s. These included Seattle's Books to Prisoners, Boston's Prison Book Program, and the Prison Library Project which was founded in Durham, North Carolina but relocated to Claremont, California in 1986. Since then, dozens of prison book programs have been established, although many have had short life-spans. Currently there are more than fifty similar projects in the United States, Canada, and the United Kingdom.[1] The groups communicate about common issues and solutions through a listserv created in 2006[2] and have held national and regional conferences, including a 2003 conference in Philadelphia, PA, a 2007 conference in Urbana-Champaign, IL, and a 2019 conference in Boston, MA.[3] In keeping with the anarchist cultural roots of the concept, each group is autonomous though they frequently collaborate on common challenges, especially prison book restrictions and book bans.

Books to Prisoners programs have a diverse range of political affiliations. Many groups identify as anarchist or abolitionist. Others are nonpolitical and simply promote education and literacy. Some are religious. Some groups serve specific populations and focus on gender, sexuality, or race.[4]

Books to prisoners programs generally accept donations of books from publishers, bookstores, and individuals. During the COVID-19 pandemic, when processing donated books was impractical, many groups launched wish lists at independent bookstores where supporters could buy in-demand books which were later sent to prisoners. Each project solicits book requests from incarcerated people, usually by genre or by naming a preferred author. Often-requested materials include dictionaries, how-to books, educational books, and historical works, especially those focusing on African-American, Latino, and Native American history.[5] Project volunteers or workers fill the requests by sending a few books taken from the project's library. There is no cost to book recipients.

Generally, volunteers answer letters, mail packages, and complete administrative work. Many of the projects are affiliated with a local independent bookstore in their home city, which provides a drop-off location for donations and sometimes a small supply of books as well.

Prison book groups continuously struggle to fulfill their mission in the face of prison book bans, which constitute the largest area of book censorship in the United States.[6] In 2018, Mississippi-based prison book group Big House Books sued the Mississippi Department of Corrections over an all-encompassing ban on non-religious books; the lawsuit was dropped after the Department of Corrections agreed to allow Big House Books to continue sending free books to Mississippi prisons.[7] Also in 2018, the state of New York issued Directive 4911A in an attempt to restrict the books available to prisoners at three of its prisons; after public outcry and media attention, garnered in part through the efforts of New York City-based prison book group Books Through Bars, the directive was rescinded.[8] In 2019, the Washington Department of Corrections banned the shipment of used books directly to prisoners. After facing public criticism and pushback from Seattle Books to Prisoners, the Washington DOC partially backed down and allowed shipments from four BTP programs to continue.[9]

List of Books to Prisoners organizations

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There are dozens of Books to Prisoners organizations in the US, Canada, and the UK.[10]

US

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Books to Prisons, Birmingham, AL

Read Between The Bars, Tucson, AZ

Books for Prisoners at UCSD, San Diego, CA

Pages and Time, Los Angeles, CA

Prison Library Project, Claremont, CA

Prisoners Literature Project, San Francisco, CA

US Davis Books to Prisoners, Sacramento, CA

Pages for Prisons, Boulder, CO

DC Books to Prisons Project, Washington, DC

Gainesville Books to Prisoners, Gainesville, FL

Open Books Prison Book Project, Pensacola, FL

X Books, Atlanta, GA

Chicago Books to Women in Prison, Chicago, IL

Liberation Library, Chicago, IL

Midwest Books to Prisoners, Chicago, IL

Reading Reduces Recidivism, Carbondale, IL

Urbana-Champaign Books to Prisoners Project, Urbana, IL

Midwest Pages to Prisoners Project, Bloomington, IN

Louisville Books to Prisoners, Louisville, KY

Louisiana Books 2 Prisoners, New Orleans, LA

Great Falls Books Through Bars, Greenfield, MA

Prison Book Program, Quincy, MA

Unitarian Universalist Ann Arbor Prison Books, Ann Arbor, MI

Women's Prison Book Project, Minneapolis, MN

Big House Books, Jackson, MS

Liberation Lit, Kansas City, MO

Missouri Prison Books, St. Louis, MO

Lincoln Prison Book Project, Lincoln, NE

Books Behind Bars, Wildwood, NJ

Books Beyond Bars, New York, NY

Buffalo Books Through Bars, Buffalo, NY

NYC Books Through Bars, New York, NY

Prison Books Project, Beacon, NY

Saxapahaw Prison Books, Brooklyn, NY

Asheville Prison Books Program, Asheville, NC

NC Women's Prison Book Project, Durham, NC

Prison Books Collective Publishing and Distribution, Carrboro, NC

Tranzmission Prison Project, Asheville, NC

Antioch College's Prison Justice Library, Yellow Springs, OH

Athens Books to Prisoners, Athens, OH

Redbird Books to Prisoners, Columbus, OH

OK Prison Books Collective, Tulsa, OK

Portland Books to Prisoners, Portland, OR

Rogue Liberation Library, Ashland, OR

Pittsburgh Prison Book Project, Pittsburgh, PA

Books Through Bars, Philadelphia, PA

Providence Books Through Bars, Providence, RI

Tennessee Prison Books Project, Nashville, TN

Inside Books, Austin, TX

Books Behind Bars, Charlottesville, VA

Virginia Tech Prison Book Program, Blacksburg, VA

Books to Prisoners, Seattle, WA

Books to Prisoners Olympia, Olympia, WA

Books to prisoners Spokane, Spokane, WA

Lopez Island Books to Prisoners, Lopez Island, WA

Appalachian Prison Book Project, Morgantown, WV

LGBT Books to Prisoners, Madison, WI

Wisconsin Books to Prisoners, Madison, WI

US Virgin Is/ St Croix Prison Library Project, Christiansted, VI

Canada

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Books 2 Prisoners, Vancouver, BC

Books Beyond Bars, Halifax, NS

Books 2 Prisoners Ottawa, Ottawa, ON

Open Door Books, Montreal, PQ

Prisoner Correspondence Project, Montreal, PQ

UK

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Haven Distribution Books to Prisoners, London

References

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  1. ^ "Other Books to Prisoners Programs". Prison Book Program. Retrieved 10 December 2014.
  2. ^ "Bookstoprisoners - national list for prison book programs".
  3. ^ "National Conference for Prison Book Projects Held in Urbana-Champaign |".
  4. ^ "For gay prisoners nationwide, Madison effort provides a literary lifeline with free books".
  5. ^ http://www.seattleweekly.com/2007-08-15/news/when-did-used-books-become-contraband/ When did used books become contraband?
  6. ^ "Literature Locked Up: How Prison Book Restriction Policies Constitute the Nation's Largest Book Ban". PEN America. 2019-09-24. Retrieved 2022-10-21.
  7. ^ Amy, Jeff. "Mississippi inmates can get more books now, group says. Lawsuit against state dropped". The Clarion-Ledger. Retrieved 2022-10-21.
  8. ^ Bala, Nila (February 8, 2018). "There's a war on books in prisons. It needs to end". The Washington Post. Retrieved October 21, 2022.
  9. ^ Reid, Calvin (April 15, 2019). "There's a war on books in prisons. It needs to end". Publishers Weekly. Retrieved October 21, 2022.
  10. ^ "Books to Prisoners Programs – Prison Book Program". Retrieved 2024-12-11.