Yorkshire Post

Volunteer army puts adventure on Dales doorsteps

Libraries provide source of escape from lockdown

- RUBY KITCHEN NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: ruby.kitchen@jpress.co.uk ■ Twitter: @ReporterRu­by

A WORLD of adventure awaits in the joyous escape of a good book or the gripping twists of a welltold tale.

With libraries closed to customers in the traditiona­l way, an army of volunteers is reaching out across North Yorkshire to ensure services can be accessed from home. This is a different kind of nourishmen­t, say volunteers, as they carry out doorstep deliveries and porch-side drops.

“You can escape into a wonderful world with books,” said volunteer Gillian Aitken, who helps with library deliveries in the Yorkshire Dales and in the town of Leyburn.

“You are travelling, in your imaginatio­n, and connecting with other people and other ideas.

“The people we deliver to are often isolated by the fact they can’t get out much,” she added. “In this pandemic they have become even more so. It is a lifeline.

“It’s just a wonderful escape, in turning the page to find out what happens next.”

There are 42 libraries across North Yorkshire, with some 1,500 people accessing home library services from the county council last year. Some are isolating, others may be vulnerable. Still more are finding it lonely.

In Selby, a pair of friends who first met at the nursery gates when their children were young are now working together for the community.

Annabel Garnett and Jennifer Leitch volunteer for the market town’s home library service.

“For the people who use the service, we are on their calendar and they look forward to us arriving,” said Ms Leitch.

The ladies make fortnightl­y deliveries to people like Albert Hamer, aged in his 90s, who would otherwise struggle to get fresh books to read.

They are “little gems” he said, “the pair of them”. “When the ladies come, they give a little kick, a little boost, because nobody else comes,” said Mr Hamer.

Miss Aitken, a retired English teacher, was recently charged with finding a selection of titles for an elderly woman in West Burton, in the remotest dales.

A volunteer in the village will deliver, and while in the past they might have stayed for a cup of tea and a chat it will now be socially distanced book drop.

In Leyburn, meanwhile, she supports a voracious reader who will run through 10 books every fortnight, reading from the moment she wakes every day.

The connection comes in opening a world of opportunit­y, said Miss Aitken, who relishes the “detective work” in discerning what titles may suit.

“We all love a good book, a good page turner,” she said. “It’s a lovely contact, even if we’re just delivering to a porch.

“Just being able to talk about books connects you with another person. It resonates. These things are so much more important at the moment.”

Laura Dinning, outreach librarian for Leyburn and the Dales, said the home library service is greatly valued.

“There are some customers who just want books,” she said. “Then there are people who are perhaps a bit lonely or socially isolated, and who have a rapport with volunteers.

“While we can’t do that at the moment, it is combating isolation.

“It’s the human side of it. It really does have a positive impact.”

You can escape into a wonderful world with books Gillian Aitken, library volunteer

 ?? PICTURES: GARY LONGBOTTOM. ?? NOVEL PURSUITS: Jean Morby at Harrogate Library arranging books for the Home Library Servoice.
PICTURES: GARY LONGBOTTOM. NOVEL PURSUITS: Jean Morby at Harrogate Library arranging books for the Home Library Servoice.
 ?? PICTURE: BRUCE ROLLINSON. ?? OUTREACH: Gillian Aitken, retired English teacher, now delivering books at Kirkwood Hall in Leyburn.
PICTURE: BRUCE ROLLINSON. OUTREACH: Gillian Aitken, retired English teacher, now delivering books at Kirkwood Hall in Leyburn.

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