She calls it a “secret garden.” Pam Allyn, Founder of Books for Boys at Children’s Village, likens the campus library to a secret garden. “It comes alive day after day for these kids.”
One crisp winter morning, Pam Allyn gave me a tour of the Children’s Village, a residential treatment program, about twenty miles outside New York City.
Pam Allyn, a literary expert, started the Books for Boys program, an innovative literary initiative, with this simple premise: Change the lives of children through books.
As Pam told me her story, it became clear that the kids she mentors face extraordinary challenges: “To be here you’ve had a difficult journey.”
Many kids are from families who could no longer care for them. Some have learning problems in school and never got the attention they needed. Many have been in foster homes or their parents have died. Most grew up living in poverty.
Pam’s full time job is at LitLife, a company she started that offers professional development, consulting, and coaching for teachers and others in the school community.
Through her work as a teaching consultant at the Children’s Village school, she also started volunteering her time there. She volunteers here a lot. As does her husband and her high school–aged daughter.
As we peered through the windows of the campus library (that also serves as a lunchroom), she told me about her experiences.
She noticed a few things when she first spent time at Children’s Village.
For one the library was a decrepit place; the books had been outdated or had little relevancy for the kids. She also noticed that the “cottages”—the residences at Children’s Village where the boys live and sleep—had no books to read.
This sparked several ideas.
She started to recruit more reading mentors.
She also turned the campus library into something more alive than it had been. She spruced it up with the help of Susan Meigs, Associate Director, and volunteers from the Amherst College Internship Program. They went to work, spending hours weeding through books, determining which ones would compel kids to come to the library, and scouting out new books. The goal was to make it into a fun, literary place where kids could go.



























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