In total, Curtis drove 2,100 miles, visited 13 schools and gave away more than 700 books as part of AFT’s Reading Opens the World program, which has given away more than 1.5 million books since it launched in December 2021. At every school she visited, Curtis encountered the same thing she saw in Wibaux: libraries that needed contemporary, relevant books, and in some instances, a librarian.
That was the case in Wilsall, where Mandy Johnstone is serving as the school’s first certified librarian. During Johnstone’s initial review of the library’s inventory, she found a 118-year-old children’s book that perpetuated inaccurate, harmful portrayals of Native Americans. She replaced it with titles like Fry Bread: A Native American Family Story; Ancestor Approved: Intertribal Stories for Kids; and Firekeeper’s Daughter—all written by Native authors and all published within the last four years.
Curtis discovered the same need for relevant books in Billings. When one boy saw a book on the history of the city, it was all he wanted to read.
“He immediately came up and asked if he could take it home,” Curtis says.
She found the same thing in Crow Agency School, where students learn in the Crow language, and in Baker, Hardin, Hellgate, Pryor and Trout Creek.