Dedicated to the fight for a more literate Maine, Maine Reads provides meaningful programs that teach reading, encourage literacy and celebrate Maine’s rich literary heritage. Maine Reads works to:
- Provide books to Maine’s kindergartners;
- Offer educational and informational activities including author visits to increase and teach reading/literacy;
- Foster and promote collaboration for literacy agencies and programs across the state;
- Increase public awareness of literacy outreach programming available throughout the state of Maine;
- Connect Maine’s literacy outreach organizations;
- Obtain and make funding available to libraries and other nonprofits for literacy outreach.
In addition to working to connect the public with literacy organizations, creating a forum for them to convene, Maine Reads offers the following programs.
For the past twelve years, Maine Reads has presented Read With ME., an outreach program that gets books to Maine’s kindergartners. Read With ME. is made possible by FairPoint Communications and the Law Offices of Joe Bornstein. Maine Reads distributes 20,000 books and reading activity handouts to every public school kindergartner in Maine; books are also distributed to kindergartners who are homeschooled or attend private or parochial schools that choose to participate in the program. Each year, the featured book is either written or illustrated by a Mainer, and often these authors and illustrators make the rounds of the schools. The books are distributed statewide with the help of a loyal volunteer corps, including members of the Maine Army National Guard, FairPoint Pioneers and FairPoint tecnicians.
Maine Community Literacy Project
The Maine Community Literacy Project is designed to encourage communities to examine their literacy needs and goals and address these needs. Libraries are the lead organizations for this process and so are eligible for planning and implementation grants from Maine Reads.
To receive Maine Reads Community Literacy Project implementation grants funding, which helps cover the cost of presenting programs designed to address a community’s literacy needs, libraries must first apply to Maine Reads for planning grant funding. More than forty libraries have received planning grants over the past six years. Planning grants mandate that libraries create local literacy advisory panels, hold a public forum on literacy, review existing literacy programs, and determine literacy needs and possible collaborative projects addressing those needs.
Libraries that fulfilled the requirements of the planning grant are eligible to apply for a Maine Reads Community Literacy Project implementation grant. Implementation grant funding ranged from $500 to $2,000. Projects and programs receiving funding have ranged from a mobile unit to deliver books and programs to a rural community, to a readers' theatre workshop to a literacy program designed to develop kindergarten reading readiness skills. Targeted audiences ranged from children, to male teens, to seniors. Over the past six years more than forty Maine libraries have received funding through the Maine Community Literacy Project.
The Maine Festival of the Book returns to Portland March 29 - April 1, 2012, with a full day of programming Saturday, March 31 at the Abromson Center at the University of Southern Maine. Most events are free.
While the Maine Reads Community Literacy Project afforded the opportunity for literacy outreach activities at a grassroots and generally rural level, the Maine Reads Festival of the Book draws on the writing talent proliferating Maine and is held in an urban setting.
The Maine Festival of the Book is an annual celebration of reading and writing, held in April in Portland. It attracts people from all over the state, as well as readers from far beyond, to a concentrated literary extravaganza.
A variety of programs of all genres designed to appeal to audiences of all ages are presented. Much of the adult programming is dedicated to thematic conversations among writers. In addition there are readings, poetry out loud and other performances, booksignings, and a mélange of activities for young and old and all reading levels.
Major writers from outside the State once again join Maine's cadre of outstanding authors. Past presenters include Pulitzer Prize winners David McCullough, Richard Ford, Elizabeth Strout, Paul Harding and Maxine Kumin, best-selling authors Tess Gerritsen, Anita Shreve, Julia Glass and David Baldacci. Past presenters for children's programming include Brian Lies, Scott Nash, and Allen Sockabasin.
Maine Reads Board of Trustees
Celeste Viger, President
Karen M. Baldacci, Vice President
Lizz Sinclair, Secretary
Dolores Soule , Treasurer
Betsey Andersen
Susan Austin
Shirley Helfrich
Lanelle Duke
Pamela Joy
Denise Martin
Matt Stein
Staff:
Sarah Cecil, Executive Director
Paige Holmes, Development Director



