Roughly 700 crime fiction books
will be gifted via all of the city’s libraries.
The initiative helps celebrate
National Crime Reading Month, which takes place each June, and is organised by
the Crime Writers’ Association in partnership with the national charity, The
Reading Agency.
National Crime Reading Month sees
over a hundred author events and talks in bookshops, libraries, theatres up and
down the country, alongside a series of free online events as readers are
encouraged to #PickUpAPageTurner.
CrimeFest has ran the Big Library
Crime Book Giveaway for three years.
The final CrimeFest in Bristol
took place in May after 17 years since the first event launched.
CrimeFest has left a lasting
literary legacy on the city. Over the years, it has donated thousands of
pounds’ worth of books to inner city school libraries across Bristol, with
support from the convention’s title sponsor, Specsavers.
Adrian Muller, Co-host of
CrimeFest, said: “The library giveaway is a hugely important legacy for us.
Libraries and librarians play a vital role in transforming lives by fostering a
love for reading. Reading can be transformative not only emotionally, but on an
educational, economic, and social level, and it’s clear that the crime genre
offers a popular gateway into reading.”
Katharine Seymour, Reader
Development Librarian for Bristol Libraries, said:
“Crime fiction is an
incredibly popular genre with library readers, and we’re excited to be taking
part in this book giveaway as it brings more people into their local libraries
to discover new authors and titles. It helps us to promote the love of reading
across Bristol.”
Crime novels dominate library
lending, with Jack Reacher’s Lee Child regularly being the most borrowed author
year-on-year.
Lee and his brother Andrew Child were featured guests at the
final CrimeFest.
Karen Napier, CEO, The Reading
Agency said: “Through our reading advocacy work, we know how important crime
fiction is both for lifelong reading lovers and for those who are just starting
out on their reading journey. Thanks to its structured plot-driven narratives,
crime fiction often rights wrongs and solves mysteries so we experience a sense
of justice and resolution in the pages of a novel, which we often can’t find in
the real world. This is part of its huge appeal.”
Regular reading has far-reaching
social impacts; improving health, wellbeing, life chances and social
connections.
Research from The Reading Agency, who work across the UK to empower people of all ages to read, shows that adults who read for just 30 minutes a week are 20% more likely to report greater life satisfaction. However, only half (50%) of adults now read regularly, and 1 in 10 find reading difficult.

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