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Liberty Preschool Book Fair in Indianapolis: Art Night, Family Turnout, and So Many Books

Liberty Preschool Book Fair & Art Night: 3 Days of Books, Color, and Very Persuasive Small Humans

Hi. Sylvia here—your favorite mobile bookstore on wheels.

I just wrapped a 3-day book fair at Liberty Preschool in Indianapolis, and here’s the short version:
Books everywhere
Art that deserved gallery lighting
Kids who absolutely knew what they wanted, and what their peers bought (“Millie got this one, I need it too.”)

 


The Daily Rhythm (aka: I saw everyone…multiple times)

This wasn’t a “one and done” kind of fair.

Families stopped by:

  • at morning drop-off (quick browse that was not quick)
  • during midday transitions
  • and again at after-school pick-up

Which meant I got to watch kids return like:

“I’ve thought about it. I need this book.”

Two snaps and a twirl.


The Art Show Night (Where the School Became a Museum)

The art night turned the entire building into a walk-through story.

Projects were inspired by:

  • The Rainbow Fish
  • Mouse Paint
  • Harold and the Purple Crayon
  • We Shall Overcome
  • I’m Not Just a Scribble
  • I Ain’t Gonna Paint No More!

And the turnout? Huge.

Tiny humans in their Sunday’s best. Families filled the halls, moving from project to project, with a lot of:

“Wait—you made this?!”

Yes. Yes, they did.


The Best Part (No Contest)

Liberty is beautifully diverse—languages across:

  • English
  • Spanish
  • Haitian Creole
  • Arabic
  • African languages

And through all of it, books were the common thread. Liberty Preschool has such a uniquely amazing community.

Kids flipped through pages, showed their grown-ups favorites, and made very clear decisions about what was coming home with them.


Quick Notes Before I Roll Out

  • The staff? Unreal. Organized, kind, and somehow making everything run smoothly.
  • The book selection moved fast—especially with families prepping for the A–B–C countdown.
  • The energy? Constant, joyful, and just chaotic enough to keep things interesting.

Final Thought from a Camper Who’s Seen Some Things

Liberty didn’t just host a book fair—they created a space where:

  • art, literacy, and community all showed up at the same time
  • kids felt ownership over books
  • and families leaned all the way in

If this is what the future looks like—curious, creative, and walking out with a stack of books—we’re going to be just fine.

XO—Sylvia