Photo by: Phil Jern

Building Your Child's Library on a Budget

by Lori Calabrese
Photo by: Phil Jern

“A home without books is like a room without windows… A library is not a luxury but one of the necessities of life.” ~Henry Ward Beecher

One important job as a parent, as if you didn’t have enough, is building a library for your child. One of the biggest factors to raising a reader is the quality and amount of books you make available for your young reader. However, parents already have many expenses and the average price for a hardcover children’s book is $19.99. So how do you build a library for your child that will encourage his love of reading and provide him with a bunch of titles he’ll remember forever?

In a time when everyone’s taking a look at ways to be frugal, you can also find some budget-friendly ways to provide books for your young readers.

Library

As a parent, your local library is your friend. A library is a great resource that provides books at no cost to your family, provided you have a library card and remember to return the books on time. For preschoolers, libraries often offer free programs such as storytime and are a great way to expose your child to a world of books. Preschoolers will see it as a treat to make a trip to their local library and select books not available to them in their own collection. This is a wonderful way to try out books before purchasing them. You’ll find certain books your child is drawn to that will be worth investing in and you’ll see what your child’s interests are. Libraries also teach children the importance of taking care of books, since the books are not their own. Most libraries offer a free to a good home rack or bin. Often people donate books to their local libraries and if it’s an older book, or a duplicate, the library will place it on their free rack. Look out for book sales at your local library because it’s also a great place to find discounted books.

Hardcover vs. Paperback
Hardcovers are usually appropriate for young children, since they’ll hold up better to the wear and tear, but the truth is, paperbacks cost less. You can create a much less expensive library with paperbacks and often find the same quality titles available in hardback.

Thrift stores are a great resource to search for books.

Dollar Stores and Dollar Bins
If you peruse the dollar bins at stores such as Target, you’ll often find board books for babies and toddlers for only $1. Sometimes they even mark items down in the dollar bins to 50% off, so you can get books for $.50!

Gifts
Tell loved ones that instead of overloading your children with toys for Christmas or birthdays, that they’re in need of books. Books make a wonderful gift, especially if the book is personalized by the gift-giver.

Garage and Yard Sales
Many parents whose children have outgrown their books will often try to declutter their house by selling them at garage and yard sales. Since most children like to mouth books and have wet hands while turning pages, turn to a safe non-toxic cleaner and give the books a good swipe.

Community Programs
I recently highlighted Dolly Parton’s Imagination Library. Available in select communities, this wonderful program provides free books for children until they turn 5. See if any of these programs are available in your area.

Book Stores often have a discount rack where you can find children’s titles appropriate for your child’s library. Most of these book stores also offer reward programs (make sure it’s at no cost to you) and sign up for e-mail alerts because they’ll also send coupons.

Used Book Stores are a wonderful place to find used books at a discount price.

Book Swaps
Look in your community for book swap opportunities. You can simply find another parent and trade books your child might not be interested in for others. You can also check at your grocery store, as some stores offer a book swap table where you can donate your used books and take another.

Building your child’s library is an investment that will pay off by instilling a love of reading in your child, and these are just a few ways you don’t have to break the bank to do it. As your child grows older, keep books on low shelves or in baskets where he can see them and get them himself. Also teach a respect for books early on and show children where their books belong, so they’re not covering your living room floor. For example, one great idea is to decorate a large cardboard box with color copies of your child’s favorite books’ covers. You can cover the copies with craft glue, so they won’t rip. Then teach your child to return their books to the box when finished and every few days, play librarian and return the books to your shelves. While building your child’s library, remember that what your child will truly remember is the time you curl up with them to read a good book.

Lori Calabrese is the award winning children’s author of The Bug That Plagued the Entire Third Grade (2010).

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48 Comments

These are great suggestions! I always look forward to my library's book sale, but just going to the library is so much fun.

A great resource for books is online book swapping. I've been a member of one, paperbackswap.com and traded outgrown or unpopular books for ones we enjoy.

we love going to the library and have done so for a long time. Another thing that I realize not all families can do - but - we have been is shop the book fair at school. Ours is done by Scholastic. They frequently have books for $5.99 and less that are still in hardcover for more. I also volunteer at our school library and work the book fair. I've been able to get first picks on great things that come in for the fair and get special discounts available only to volunteers...

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I agree with Lori completely.It is very important to have books in our home for our kids to read with them and to encourage them to read.
All moms should join our Literacy campaign.
Visit www.ReadWithNessa.com for award winning books for all ages from birth to college.

We signed up for scholastic books - a low monthly subscription and we were getting two to four hardback books a month.

Another good, inexpensive source for books are the online swap sites such as paperbackswap.com. You can list books that you no longer want, earn credits and order books, all for the price of postage. As your child grows this enables you to recycle the books that they have outgrown and replace them with new ones. An added bonus is that they often have out of print or hard to find books that you may not be able to get at your local library or bookstore.

We have an extensive library (one tall book shelf of kids books, two tall shelves of school books for various age levels to college level that span all possible subjects, two more cover religious studies, and two are young adult and adult fiction.) We buy quite a bit from Amazon (and sometimes the Amazon price with free super saver shipping is cheaper then the private sellers of used books at Amazon.) At Ebay you can buy an entire lot of books for sometimes pennies a book...

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Take advantage of book orders or book fairs at your child's school. Often times I've found the same books for as much as a 50% less than at retail stores. In addition, the school benefits from the proceeds.

These are all great suggestions, yet I have two more to add...Sell Children Books!!
I sell Usborne and Kane/Miller, which contain many titles parents are familiar with. These books are incredibly illustrative and educational. I started this to build my child's home library, yet now it has turned into a business by starting off selling to friends and then to their friends and so on. So now I have a HUGE selection of books I have gotten for FREE and have a great income...

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We utilize our LIBRARY. We check out all sorts of books, and when there are ones that I really Love, then I buy them. So often I have bought a book, and it just wasn't all I thought it would be. Also, paperbackswap.com is great! Really, you should check it out.

And to help build other children's libraries.... I always gift books!

My parents and grandparents live far away, and they are Great at giving books... and they know I appreciate getting them!

~KATIE

Ebay is also a great place to find books that are in good to great condition for a fraction of retail. I also shop my child's scholastic book flyers they always have $1 books and big discounts on series packages. I purchased the Magic Tree House Series Books #1-28 for around $40...less than $2 a book.

I find used hardback books in excellent condition on sites like half.com and amazon. I try to buy from the same seller to save on shipping.

Great suggestions!

As for asking for books for Christmas & birthdays, an easy way to do that is to set up a wish list for your child/ren at amazon.com. My son has had one since he was born and he received several books from it for his first Christmas this year.

My three year old has 100s of books! We add to our library a little bit every week. We go to used bookstores (an outing our daughter loves), pick up books at thrift stores, consignment stores, library sales. Only rarely do we actually go to stores that sell new books. Evan then, there often a bargain to be found there. We augment the selection with weekly visits to the library. If we run across something there that she absolutely loves, we keep a lookout for it...

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Definitely make use of yard sales, library sales, etc. We've also found books at places like Salvation Army or used clothing stores. In addition, alibris.com sells used books at very, very reasonable prices. You can also buy used books at amazon.com. At one birthday party, in lieu of gifts or a goody bag, each child brought a gently used book which was then put into a grab bag. At the end of the party, each child was able to choose a book to take home. Everyone thought this was a great idea...

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