A Thornapple Kellogg High School teacher's vision of a community-wide book club, where participants read a single book and discuss it, is becoming reality with the help of a Michigan Municipal League Foundation grant.
The One Book, One Community project in Middleville, championed by TKHS English teacher Scott Aldrich, has been named a recipient of a $500 MML Foundation's Bridge Builders grant. The project was one of seven MML Foundation grant recipients selected. Details of the project are expected to be announced this weekend, Aldrich wrote in an email to the Sun and News Thursday.
“As of now, our plan is for people to contact us at middlevillereads@gmail.com with interest,” Aldrich wrote. “They will receive an autoreply that prompts them to complete a short survey.”
The grant is being used to purchase copies of the book Just Mercy: A Story of Justice and Redemption, by Bryan Stevenson. The story, which was recently made into a major motion picture, focused on the case of Walter McMillan, a black man who was wrongly convicted of murder and sentenced to death in Alabama, but later had his conviction overturned and was freed after six years on death row. Stevenson founded the Equal Justice Initiative, a nonprofit law office in Montgomery, Ala.
Aldrich worked with Middleville/TK librarian Barb Hubers and Middleville Village Council Trustee Amanda Fisk on developing the book club. The TK program received the most votes in an online survey among 16 finalists for the grants. The award was presented based on the online survey and a panel's review of TK's application, said Danielle Beard, an associate program officer for the MML Foundation.
“To me, that’s a sign that the community really wanted this,” Beard said in a telephone interview Wednesday.
Aldrich purchased copies of Just Mercy earlier this week from Schuler Books in Grand Rapids. They will be made available on a first-come, first-serve basis to those who might not otherwise be able to purchase the book. People are also encouraged to use their own copy of the book, borrow from a library or purchase from a bookstore.
“We plan to set up a webpage with access to supplemental materials for those interested – interviews, articles, etc. that are related to the book and author,” Aldrich wrote. “This will be shared with all who sign up and participate in the book club.”
The MML Foundation launched the Bridge Builders project earlier this year as a way of addressing rising tensions along the lines of race, politics and socioeconomics.
“We wanted to help communities address those tensions to create understanding and meet the need for people to connect safely with one another during the pandemic,” Beard said. “There is more that unites us than divides us, and sometimes we need to remind each other of that.”
Earlier this year, Aldrich took part in a viewing and discussion of the movie “Just Mercy” with a group of educators from around the state. He also attended an address given by Stevenson in September 2019 at a benefit for Mel Trotter Ministries in Grand Rapids.
Aldrich said he is planning a gathering of some sort during the final week of October to discuss the book, most likely on a weeknight, for club members to discuss the book.
“That could include any of these options: full group gathering, possibly at the pavilion in town, small groups independently arranged throughout town, a completely virtual discussion online, or some combination of those options,” he said.
Beard said that based on the response to this year's competition, which attracted more than 70 applications, the MML Foundation likely will have another grant competition next year.
“There’s a lot of need, a lot of desire to engage in these type of projects,” she said.