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Posted: 2017-06-22T15:46:08Z | Updated: 2017-06-22T15:46:08Z Millennials Are Using Public Libraries More Than Any Other Generation | HuffPost

Millennials Are Using Public Libraries More Than Any Other Generation

Give it up for young readers.
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Most likely to prioritize avocado toast over home ownership . Most likely to hate cereal . Millennials get stuck with the most grating superlatives, but according to a Pew Research Center report from last fall, they’re getting a lot of things right, too. The generation frequents public libraries more often than members of any other age group.

A blog published on the center’s site  on Wednesday says, “53% of Millennials (those ages 18 to 35 at the time) say they used a library or bookmobile in the previous 12 months. That compares with 45% of Gen Xers, 43% of Baby Boomers and 36% of those in the Silent Generation.”

And, the question on the survey was explicitly about public libraries, as opposed to university libraries, so the fact that many millennials are still college-age is moot.

These findings are consistent with a 2014 study from Pew, which shows that millenials read more books than members of other generations .

It’s also possible that younger and more civically-minded readers are privier to the services provided by libraries that are unrelated to checking out new titles.

So, the need for libraries and the apparent desire young people have to visit libraries makes the possibility for budget cuts an urgent issue. In Trump’s proposed 2018 budget, the Institute of Museum and Library Services was eliminated altogether . In response, librarians put their advocacy experience to use, fighting for these spaces that are valued by younger generations.

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Before You Go

19 Nonfiction Books That Will Expand Your Mind
"Sex Object" by Jessica Valenti(01 of19)
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Feminist blogger Jessica Valenti knew she would receive backlash for naming her memoir Sex Object. Despite the fact that no woman appreciates being demeaned to the status of an object, Valenti predicted that trolls would object to the name, claiming Valenti wasnt attractive enough to deserve the dehumanizing title. And she was right. This is but one infuriating circumstance Valenti explores in her essay collection , which recalls with vulnerability and force the experience growing up a sex object first, a human being second. Readers might be surprised at how many of their own repressed memories bubble up reading Valentis account, how many times instances of misogyny have been laughed off or brushed under the rug. -Priscilla Frank (credit:Dey Street Books)
"Known and Strange Things" by Teju Cole(02 of19)
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Teju Cole divided his collection of nonfiction essays into three parts (Reading Things, Seeing Things and Being Here") plus an epilogue. His writing touches on the stories we come across in books, in museums, in the news, and on social media, contextualizing everything from a famous poem to a Snapchat. For those seeking connection in an increasingly disjointed world, Cole makes the case for art in whatever form, made in whatever time period, encouraging his readers to draw parallels between the past and present. One essay worth reading on its own is "The White Savior Industrial Complex." -Katherine Brooks (credit:Random House)
"The Art of Waiting" by Belle Boggs(03 of19)
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Infertility and the attempt to circumvent it, to fulfill the desire to have a family is regarded as an intense, personal journey. And Boggs writes about the topic with a resonant emotional tenor, having gone through IVF treatment herself, while working as a teacher in North Carolina. But she concedes that as a white woman with a good job, shes far from the only person whos struggled with the potentially thwarted want to have children. In The Art of Waiting, her own journey is only a piece of the puzzle; she talks with scientists, women of color advocating for infertility and adoption coverage, and a man who was sterilized by the state of North Carolina as part of its eugenics program. The result is heartbreaking, and illuminating. -Maddie Crum

Read our interview with Belle Boggs .
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"The Selfishness of Others" by Kristin Dombek(04 of19)
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Kristin Dombek, the former advice columnist for n+1, is capable of citing both Sigmund Freud and Tucker Max as reference points for a thoroughly clinical yet also, at times, subtly funny investigation of our culture's obsession with narcissism. This is less a guide for those "narcosphere" patrons prone to rashly labeling their bad boyfriends narcissists and more a rabbit hole of pop psychology that turns old ideas about assholes inside out. Her words bite: Only one person can be the center of another persons world at any given time, and ideally, this would always be you. This is where all the narcissistic romance websites invite you to be: in the center of the world, stuck in time, assessing the moral status of others, until love is gone. -KB (credit:FSG)
"Invisible Man, Got the Whole World Watching," by Mychal Denzel Smith(05 of19)
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Invisible Man is a memoir that traces Mychal Denzel Smiths life, coming of age in a military family, growing up on hip-hop, and eventually writing for The Nation. But its also a thoughtful response to several years worth of injustices committed against black men in America, a story that threads familiar feelings of angst and frustration into a personal, linear story of pushing back against the biases of others while recognizing your own. -KB (credit:Nation Books)
"Future Sex" by Emily Witt(06 of19)
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Tinder and its ilk are ruining romance, or so the story goes. How are we to choose one partner, when there are hundreds nay, thousands at our fingertips? Witt reminds readers, at the outset of her book , that not choosing is a viable option, if an unsafe one, particularly for women who arent careful when arranging casual meetups. How, then, are we to navigate the new realities of sex, colored as they are by new ways of knowing each other, activities like camming, like free-love-fuelled music festivals, like startups aimed at clinically distributed female pleasure? Witt inserts herself in these worlds at first, as a voyeur, and later, a more willing, entrenched participant. The resulting book is a wild, informative ride. -MC

Read our review of Future Sex .
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"Muslim Girl" by Amani Al-Khatahtbeh(07 of19)
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In her piercing memoir, media mogul and activist Amani Al-Khatahtbeh describes her family's new reality following 9/11, when she was in elementary school: her mother's tires slashed, threats and insults hurled at her family. A decade and a half later, as evidenced by the hateful rhetoric thrown around about Muslim individuals during the presidential campaign, anti-Islam prejudice is still fully present among the American public. The MuslimGirl.com founder chronicles her adolescence as a Muslim teenager and the experience that led her to fill a niche in pop culture, covering issues and media relevant to young women like her. Her book is a both a must-read autobiography and a call to arms. - Jillian Capewell (credit:Simon Schuster)
"Ghostland" by Colin Dickey(08 of19)
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From Ghostbusters to Ghostland, this year brought us all the quality ghost-related content we could ask for. The latter, Colin Dickeys wonderful tour of the countrys ghost legends and alleged haunted houses, manages to explore the issue without utter credulity and without abrasive skepticism by focusing on the cultural, social, historical, and even aesthetic elements that seem to give rise to certain ghost stories. He turns over how slavery and Native American decimation have contributed to Americas specific strains of poltergeist legends, and the particular attachment we have to their land -- and our haunted houses. Ghostland is a little spooky (especially if youre reading it all alone on a blustery night), engagingly written, and packed with fascinating, gruesome and odd historical tidbits. - Claire Fallon

Read our review of Ghostland.
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"How to Be a Person in the World" by Heather Havrilesky(09 of19)
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Few advice columns bear up well in book anthologies its a repetitive, short-form style of writing that mostly offers a sort of muffled voyeurism into our neighbors problems that grows steadily less exciting after the 14th straight letter about a Thanksgiving dinner gone awry. Cheryl Strayeds Tiny Beautiful Things, a compilation of her Dear Sugar columns, is one notable exception. How to Be a Person in the World , a selected anthology of new and previously published Ask Polly columns by the writer Heather Havrilesky, is another. For one thing, Ask Polly is in itself an unusually longform advice column, addressing each query with multi-thousand-word responses seasoned with cultural references and personal memories of Havrileskys. Its also what she calls an existential advice column; the letters mostly address questions about a persons purpose in life, romantic destiny, ability to be happy or content, or similarly large questions. Effectively, How to Be a Person in the World doesnt just offer advice, or even voyeurism: Its a book of essays that broadens a readers empathy for herself and for others. -CF

Read our interview with Heather Havrilesky.
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"The Fire This Time" by Jesmyn Ward(10 of19)
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As a nod to James Baldwin's 1963 work The Fire Next Time, author Jesmyn Ward gathered the writings of prominent voices on race, including Kiese Laymon, Claudia Rankine and Edwidge Danticat, among others. Their writings on racial tension and a call to action ring as true as Baldwin's did in the civil rights era, offering proof that we, as a country, have a desperately long way to go to right historical wrongs. As we close out 2016, the perspectives in this collection are more urgent and essential than ever. -JC (credit:Simon Schuster)
"Every Song Ever," Ben Ratliff(11 of19)
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We are listening to music in the time of the cloud, Ratliff begins Every Song Ever: Twenty Ways to Listen to Music in an Age of Musical Plenty . Regardless of who we are or where we live, todays digital era provides us access to a seemingly infinite playlist, the ability to listen to anything, anywhere, anytime. This radical abundance, and the experimentation and cross-pollination it engenders, Ratcliff suggests, requires new means of listening and understanding music. Genre, The New York Times music critic suggests, is obsolete. Ratliff goes on to suggest 20 new ways to describe music based more in feeling than era, technique, or physical origin. Slowness, for example, unites Sarah Vaughans Lover Man and Sleeps Dopesmoker. And silence or quietness connects John Cages 433 and Aaliyahs Are You That Somebody. Its a fun read, best experienced with Spotify open and ready, and an unorthodox look at musics past and limitless present. -PF (credit:FSG)
"Rolling Blackouts" by Sarah Glidden(12 of19)
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Sarah Glidden followed her friends to the Middle East with one goal: to report on the reporters. Her friends were actually members of a journalist collective, traveling to Turkey, Syria and Iraq in order to learn refugees stories and report on the after-effects of the U.S. war on Iraq. The result is part travelogue, part memoir and part reportage an accessible and specific narrative for news-tired readers who have long disassociated from headlines about war and refugees. If this is your introduction to comics journalism, dont let it be the last. -JC

Read our interview with Sarah Glidden .
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"Violation" by Sallie Tisdale(13 of19)
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Sallie Tisdales name might not be immediately recognizable to readers, but after finishing this collection , you wont soon forget her. Tisdale, a nurse and mother as well as a writer, explores various topics in a quietly revealing manner. One standout is We Do Abortions Here, first published in 1987 and all the more relevant in a political climate where womens rights are routinely dismissed and threatened most recently in the new Texas law requiring clinics to cremate or bury aborted fetuses . Tisdales writing is spectacular and her observations valuable: Shes a voice to listen to. -JC (credit:Hawthorne Books)
"You Belong to the Universe" by Jonathon Keats(14 of19)
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Buckminster Fuller, the inventor and artist known for his love of geodesic domes, his faith in Dymaxion cars, and his desire to make the world work for one hundred percent of humanity, is a fascinating subject. He was both an intellectual and a character straight out of a sci-fi novel, who believed so deeply that collaboration was necessary to combat our planets changing circumstances. Jonathon Keats manages to bring the 20th-century ideas of Fuller into the 21st century, arguing that the visionaries utopian proposals are more possible than ever. -KB (credit:Oxford University Press)
"Girls & Sex" by Peggy Orenstein(15 of19)
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Modern women may bristle at the idea of a book that wrestles with the pros and cons of sex-positive feminism. Fair enough. But as a mother, Orenstein finds the question working its way into her personal life. So, as a journalist, she pursued it fervidly, interviewing over 70 college girls, getting to know the gritty details of their sex lives thus far. In doing so, Orenstein has created an illuminating ethnographic study of feminine youth. Sections of the book are dedicated to hook up culture, to rape culture, and to the celebrities upheld as emblems of sexual expression. Orenstein confronts a generation that seems foreign to her with openness and kindness, and in doing so shows us a thing or two about ourselves. -MC

Read our review of Girls & Sex.
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"Where Am I Now?" by Mara Wilson(16 of19)
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Allow yourself to be drawn into this memoir by Mara Wilson-as-Matilda's sweet cover photo, stay for the well-wrought insights on fame and loss. Wilson, the rare Hollywood scribe who is as compelling on the page as she was on the screen in her heyday discusses the death of her mother, mental health and yes, of course fascinating tidbits from the "Matilda" set and beyond. -JC (credit:Penguin)
"Agnes Martin and Me" by Donald Woodman(17 of19)
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Donald Woodman describes himself as "assistant, friend, and sometime adversary" to the late, great Abstract Expressionist Agnes Martin, for whom he worked for seven years . Martin lived in isolation in New Mexico, producing minimalist canvases and concise, meditative mottos summarizing her practice. She said things like "No, I am not any of those stereotypes that are placed on women. I am an old woman, but I insult the male ego so men don't like me around." If you love the artist, you'll love this quiet recounting of her life and influence. -KB (credit:Lyon Artbooks)
"Adnan's Story" by Rabia Chaudry(18 of19)
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If you listened to "Serial," the smash hit podcast that investigated the harrowing case of Adnan Syed, a man convicted under peculiar circumstances of murder in Baltimore back in 2000, then you'll fly through this book . Rabia Chaudry certainly provides a biased recounting of Syed's story -- she believes thoroughly that he's been denied justice, a foil to the critical lens provided by Sarah Koenig. But if you can't let the case go, here's your extended reading. -KB (credit:St Martins Press)
"Land of Enchantment" by Leigh Stein(19 of19)
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Land of Enchantment is the official nickname of New Mexico, where writer Leigh Stein lived briefly when she was in her early 20s and madly in love. She met Jason at a play audition, and the two moved to New Mexico together so he could work while she wrote; the plan was that after a year theyd move to LA so he could audition while she worked. Instead, he became abusive and the relationship fell dramatically apart. Several years later, by then a professional with a new boyfriend and living in New York, she got a phone call from an unfamiliar number: Jason had been killed in a motorcycle crash. The elegiac, poetic memoir Stein wrote about their tortured relationship, her grief for him, and her lifetime of depression and isolation hits on resonant notes for anyone whos unexpectedly lost a loved one, been through an abusive or unhealthy relationship, or struggled with mental health issues. That means if youre prone to weeping while you read, you should have a hanky ready. -CF

Read our interview with Leigh Stein.
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