Library Week 2026

graphic for celebrate national library week April 19 to 25 2026

Find Your Joy

What brings you joy? Whether it’s cozying up with a new story, learning a new skill, gathering with community or something else, you can find your joy at the Kansas City, Kansas Public Library!

National Library Week, April 19–25, 2026, is a time to celebrate the many ways libraries bring people together, spark imagination, and support lifelong learning. From books and digital resources to job assistance and creative programming, libraries are essential to thriving communities.

You’re invited to join the celebration! Whether you're a longtime patron, a new neighbor, or haven’t visited in a while, now is the perfect time to explore all the library has to offer.

 

April 19 - Right to Read Day
This is a day for readers, advocates, and library lovers to take action to protect, defend, and celebrate the right to read. Learn more about KCKPL's Freedom to Read Statement here

April 20 - Library Workers Day
Help us celebrate a day for library staff, users, administrators, and Friends groups to recognize the valuable contributions made by all library workers.

April 21 - Library Outreach Day
Formerly Bookmobile day, this is a great opportunity to honor the outreach that libraries do and the dedicated library professionals who are meeting their patrons where they are.

April 22 - Take Action for Libraries Day
A day to rally advocates to support libraries. 

"Celebrating libraries, thanking library workers, visiting libraries is how I find my joy. There are so many library kids and library grown-ups who have yet to fully embrace their library joy, and I am so excited for them! When they enter the world of libraries and stories, I am confident they will find not only their library joy but their courage to believe in their own story and maybe even share it with others."

-Mychal Threets - Honorary Chair 
of National Library Week 2026

National Library Week honorary ambassador, Mychal Threets gives 2 thumbs up while wearing a dark t-shirt that reads Library Joy in rainbow lettering

I'm So Happy You're Here

Award-winning librarian, author, and new host of the children’s program “Reading Rainbow” Mychal Threets will serve as Honorary Chair of National Library Week 2026.

“Find Your Joy,” is an invitation for people of all backgrounds to explore and discover what sparks joy in them at the library. The theme amplifies a message that is ever-present in Threets’ recurring viral videos about the innumerable ways people can find joy in the library, and in his debut picture book, I’m So Happy You’re Here: A Celebration of Library Joy. His book is available now in our collection with the Spanish version on it's way soon!

 

CHECK OUT I'M SO HAPPY YOU'RE HERE


 

librarian arranging a display of book on a table

Amazing Library Staff

What makes the Kansas City, Kansas Public Library so great? The people in it! We will be interviewing a few of our staff members to hear their thoughts and stories about working at the library. Check back throughout April to see their answers with the start of our Library Joy series! 

Spirit Week

Staff across all our locations will have the opportunity to participate in a spirit week to celebrate our awesome community! Make sure to stop into your local library to check out what they are up to throughout National Library Week. You might see them dressed as their favorite book character, wearing crazy socks, or even looking like they belong in another decade.


 

Recent Titles to Check Out!

book cover for "When the Forest Breathes"

When the Forest Breathes

The author of Finding the Mother Tree and scientist who pioneered the concept of sophisticated communication between trees, Suzanne Simard now offers a powerful vision for saving our forests based on nature’s deep-rooted cycles of renewal.

"A masterclass on the inner workings of forests. . . . This is science as an act of love for the world.” —Zoë Schlanger, author of The Light Eaters

Raised in a family of loggers committed to sensible forest stewardship, trailblazing ecologist Suzanne Simard has watched as timber companies leave forests at higher risk for wildfires, water crises, and plant and animal extinction. But her research has the potential to chart a new course. The forest, she reveals, is a symphony of finely honed cycles of regeneration—from mushrooms breaking down logs to dying elder trees passing their genetic knowledge to younger ones—that hold the key to protecting our forests. Working closely with local Indigenous communities, whose models of responsible forestry have been largely dismissed, Simard examines how human interventions—particularly destruction of the overstory's mother trees—endanger new growth and longevity. If we can honor the tools that trees have honed for sharing intergenerational wisdom, she argues, we can protect these sacred places for many years to come.

As she considers how older living things facilitate the conditions for new growth to flourish, Simard faces parallel rhythms of loss and regeneration in her own life, watching her two daughters grow into adults and savoring her final days with her ailing mother. Animated by wonder for our forests and the intricate practices of caretaking that have long sustained them, When the Forest Breathes is a vital reminder of all the natural world has to teach us about adaptability, resilience, and community.

Book Cover for "Son of Nobody"

Son of Nobody

"The most famous stories of the Trojan War and its aftermath are Homer's Iliad and Odyssey. But these were not the only tales of the war sung to ancient audiences by bards-there were others, now vanished but for echoes and fragments, collected in what has come to be known as the Epic Cycle. In SON OF NOBODY, one such tale is the Psoad: an epic that follows the son of a goatherd, Psoas of Midea, who leaves his wife and family to fight on the beaches of Troy. Psoas meets his doom, and the epic poem of his life is lost to time-until another man on a foreign shore, a Canadian academic studying at Oxford, discovers its relics thirty centuries later. A truly daring feat of imagination, SON OF NOBODY is a novel composed in two voices: the first, a series of fragments from antiquity that tell the story of Troy from a lost, alt-Homeric tradition; the second, the voice of a modern-day scholar, Harlow Donne, who assembles and comments on these fragments while navigating a conflict of his own. Obsessed with his discovery, Donne still can't seem to let go of his family's past-he weaves together the tale of uncovering ancient papyri, faded codices, and broken cuneiform tablets with memories of his daughter as a child and his wife before their separation. Donne translates and writes in the heartfelt modes of Aphrodite, goddess of love, and Ares, god of war, as the paralell stories offer a poignant glimpse into both the follies of failed relationships and of battle. SON OF NOBODY upends the regal perspective of traditional epics, and by grappling with questions of ambition, family, and responsibility in both the ancient and the modern worlds, it shows "that the past is never done with, that always there are parallels and returns and repetitions, always the song continues."

Upcoming Events

This event is in the "Children" group

Playdough Party

1:00pm–2:00pm
Children
Turner Community Library
Waitlist Only
Registration Required
This event is in the "Children" group
This event is in the "Teens" group

Mermaid Craft Party

5:30pm–6:30pm
Children, Teens
Main Library
Registration Closed
Registration Required