Current:Home > MyDolly Parton is sending free books to children across 21 states — and around the world -ForexStream
Dolly Parton is sending free books to children across 21 states — and around the world
View
Date:2025-04-22 10:57:51
Dolly Parton’s father grew up poor and never got the chance to learn to read.
Inspired by her upbringing, over the past three decades, the 78-year-old country music legend has made it her mission to improve literacy through her Imagination Library book giveaway program. And in recent years, it has expanded statewide in places like Missouri and Kentucky, two of 21 states where all children under the age of 5 can enroll to have books mailed to their homes monthly.
To celebrate, she made stops Tuesday in both states to promote the program and tell the story of her father, Robert Lee Parton, who died in 2000.
“In the mountains, a lot of people never had a chance to go to school because they had to work on the farms,” she said at the Folly Theater in Kansas City, Missouri. “They had to do whatever it took to keep the rest of the family going.”
Parton, the fourth of 12 children from a poor Appalachian family, said her father was “one of the smartest people I’ve ever known,” but he was embarrassed that he couldn’t read.
And so she decided to help other kids, initially rolling out the program in a single county in her home state of Tennessee in 1995. It spread quickly from there, and today over 3 million books are sent out each month — 240 million to kids worldwide since it started.
Missouri covers the full cost of the program, which totaled $11 million in the latest fiscal year. Most of the other states chip in money through a cost-sharing model.
“The kids started calling me the ‘book lady,’” Parton said. “And Daddy was more proud of that than he was that I was a star. But Daddy got to feeling like he had really done some great as well.”
Parton, who earned the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award a decade ago, said she eventually wants to see the program in every state. She said she is proud that her dad lived long enough to see the program get off the ground.
“That was kind of my way to honor my dad, because the Bible says to honor your father and mother,” she said. “And I don’t think that just means, ‘just obey.’ I think it means to bring honor to their name and to them.”
Parton is an author herself whose titles include the 1996 children’s book “Coat of Many Colors,” which is part of the book giveaway program.
As she prepared to sing her famous song by the same name, she explained that it is about a coat her mother made her from a patchwork of mismatched fabric, since the family was too poor to afford a large piece of a single fabric. Parton was proud of it because her mother likened it the multicolored coat that is told about in the Bible — a fantastic gift from Jacob to his son Joseph.
Classmates, however, laughed at her. For years, she said the experience was a “deep, deep hurt.”
She said that with writing and performing the song, “the hurt just left me.” She received letters over the years from people saying it did the same thing for them.
“The fact,” she explained, “that that little song has just meant so much not only to me, but to so many other people for so many different reasons, makes it my favorite song.”
___
Hollingsworth reported from Mission, Kansas.
veryGood! (9)
Related
- Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
- Starbucks, Workers United union sue each other in standoff over pro-Palestinian social media post
- Biden’s visit to Israel yields no quick fixes: ANALYSIS
- Trump's frustration builds at New York civil fraud trial as lawyer asks witness if he lied
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- Kosovo asks for more NATO-led peacekeepers along the border with Serbia
- Astros awaken: Max Scherzer stumbles, Cristian Javier shines in 8-5 ALCS Game 3 conquest
- CBS News witnesses aftermath of deadly Israeli airstrike in southern Gaza
- Trump issues order to ban transgender troops from serving openly in the military
- Xi, Putin detail 'deepening' relations between Beijing and Moscow
Ranking
- Federal Spending Freeze Could Have Widespread Impact on Environment, Emergency Management
- Phillies are rolling, breaking records and smelling another World Series berth
- Nevada district attorney clears officers in fatal shooting of man who went on rampage with chainsaw
- Video of injured deer sparks calls for animal cruelty charge for Vermont hunter
- What to know about Tuesday’s US House primaries to replace Matt Gaetz and Mike Waltz
- John Kirby: Significant progress made on humanitarian assistance to Gaza but nothing flowing right now
- Mike Pompeo thinks Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin would be a really good president
- Spooked by Halloween mayhem, Tokyo's famous Shibuya district tells revelers, please do not come
Recommendation
Meta donates $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund
Italian lawmakers approve 10 million euros for long-delayed Holocaust Museum in Rome
Lobbyist gets 2 years in prison for Michigan marijuana bribery scheme
Fear, frustration for Israeli family as 7 believed to be held by Hamas
Military service academies see drop in reported sexual assaults after alarming surge
Paris Hilton shares son's first word: 'Wonder where he got that from'
Threads ban on search terms like COVID is temporary, head of Instagram says
Georgia bodycam video released in fatal police shooting of exonerated man