There are many Little Free Libraries on my regular walking route. I've never stopped to count them, but it's at least a couple dozen, and they all feel like old friends to me — the one with the frog door handle, the one with the little solar panels, the one that holds nothing but children's books, the new one with the mullioned window. Fancy!
I have to confess, I have mixed feelings about Little Free Libraries. Stocking them with books to give away (which I also do) is a double-edged sword: Yes, it's great to share books, and it's great to have a place where anyone can happen across something wonderful and take it home.
But there is a melancholy, too, to seeing all these books, no longer wanted, set out on the curb like so many thinned hostas or old pieces of furniture: Free!
Surely books are more valuable than that.
Lately, though, since the pandemic began — and even some time before that — the libraries have begun serving another purpose. People are augmenting their supply of free books with a supply of free household goods.
The Little Free Pantry movement, a sort of practical buddy to the fun-loving Little Free Libraries (it's a separate organization, but they like each other), has been around for about four years, with neighbors setting up way stations specifically for canned goods and other essentials.
But now folks are adding these items to the libraries, too. It's hard to walk past a Little Free Library these days without spotting a can of peas or corn tucked in among the books, or a roll of toilet paper front and center, or a handmade coronavirus mask.
I nabbed my first mask from a library on a walk about a month ago. Until then, I'd been making do with an old paper respirator that I found in our basement, left over from a remodeling project.