Hidden books in NSW town Braidwood taking kids on literary treasure hunts to encourage reading

Authored by abc.net.au and submitted by Sariel007

In the New South Wales Southern Tablelands town of Braidwood, a literary treasure hunt craze is sweeping the streets.

Key points: The hidden book trend in Braidwood has been going for three years

The hidden book trend in Braidwood has been going for three years Books are hidden in nooks and crannies all over town for kids to find

Books are hidden in nooks and crannies all over town for kids to find Once found, children read the book, write their name in the cover and either re-hide it or pass it on

Kids find a book sealed in a plastic sleeve, take it home to read, write their name in it, and then re-hide it or pass it on to a friend.

The books are hidden in shop windows, parks and around the streets.

The concept is simple and follows the global painted rocks craze, where kids hunt for painted rocks around their local neighbourhood.

Mum of 10, Samantha Dixon, started the trend after seeing it on a community Facebook page overseas.

"We had a bookshelf full of books the children had already read," she said.

"It's lovely to watch the little kids' faces when they find the books. It's a bit magical.

Ms Dixon started hiding children's books around town as a way to give books a new life and bring joy to local kids. ( ABC News: Jessica Clifford )

"I just thought it would be wonderful and a more useful thing [than rocks] for children."

Ms Dickson has five children of her own but is also a foster carer.

She wanted to make sure her kids were spending time away from technology.

"I enjoy the fact these books are being read and are not just being left on the shelves and that kids are outside finding them not on screens," she said.

Books like these have been hidden in Braidwood for children to find. ( ABC News: Jessica Clifford )

In New York, The Book Fairies project began in 2012 and since then has distributed more than 3.5 million books.

Amy Zaslansky founded the organisation because she wanted to share her overflowing home library with less fortunate children.

Now, the organisation distributes books to schools, orphanages, homeless shelters and doctors' offices, as well as taking them overseas.

Executive director Eileen Minogue said no home or child should be without a book.

Eileen Minogue is the executive director of the Book Fairies organisation in New York City, which has inspired other towns around the world to start their own hidden books projects. ( Supplied: The Book Fairies. )

"Aside from getting books into the hands of kids who deserve them, I can't imagine a home without books," she said.

"We move about 600,000 books a year."

The organisation inspired the hidden books movement in New Zealand.

Waikanae, Timaru and Kāpiti all have a hidden books project run by volunteers.

There were also groups in the United Kingdom.

Ms Dickson said she was inspired by the US, UK and New Zealand communities to start the Braidwood project three years ago.

"Obviously people were re-hiding books that were already out there but we have some lovely community members who are out there regularly hiding new books for the children to read," she said.

"Books have made it down the coast to Canberra. There are no real rules around them. It's just for people's enjoyment."

fizwilly on January 4th, 2023 at 17:09 UTC »

This is such an inspiration! I work in my local library and I'm going to share this with our children's department. Pretty darn cool! Thanks for sharing!!

EnochofPottsfield on January 4th, 2023 at 16:26 UTC »

Reminds me of that hidden Geotag Geocache trend (thanks u/dragonavicious!) from a decade or so ago. Hope this trend catches on similarly

Letitbemesickgirl on January 4th, 2023 at 15:28 UTC »

Love it!

There’s a free little library in a nearby town that is children themed. We love stopping there and trading our books