Retired lecturer helps promote reading culture
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Pham Thi Huyen Dung, owner of the bookstore (right) (Photo: VNA). |
At 74, Pham Thi Huyen Dung could have chosen to retire and enjoy her days, yet she decided to pursue her hobby: opening a free bookstore.
Ensconced in a corner next to Dong Da Hill in Dong Da district, her little bookshelf has grown, boasting an impressive 10,000 book titles and attracting lots of readers.
“This is a beautiful and generous act by Dung that needs preserving,” said Nguyen Cong Tien, a frequent reader at the bookstore. “I hope that the local authority will contribute to further develop this free bookstore,” Tien said.
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Student Le Cong Thanh (Photo: VNA). |
Most of the books are purchased by Dung, while some are gifted by other readers. Besides books, the readers even donate umbrellas, chairs and bookshelves to make the reading experience as comfortable as possible.
At the bookstore, readers can enjoy a good book and even sometimes have a chat about the books.
Student Le Cong Thanh, who is also a frequent reader, said: “The free bookstore is a great place for young people to catch a break from all electronic devices and enjoy good books.”
University students, as well as neighbors, often lend Huyen Dung a helping hand with reorganizing the bookshelf.
“I am glad that my bookstore has become a place for book lovers. I hope that more free bookstores will be opened in other places to nurture reading culture,” Dung said, adding that investing time in reading is the best way to uphold the country’s traditional values.
A shocking statistics in 2013 showed that each Vietnamese person read only 0.8
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Free bookstore in Hanoi's Dong Da district (Photo: VNA). |
A project submitted by the Department of Library under the Ministry of Culture, Sports
In the digital era, where reading culture is threatened by newer forms of communication, Huyen Dung’s love for books and reading rekindles the old flames of reading in people’s hearts.
Source: VNA
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