checkoutBKLYN

Every year, more than a million people visit Brooklyn Public Library, checking out over 7 million materials and attending our 40,000 programs and events. Here are just some of our patrons and staff sharing their favorite picks from the stacks.

Share your favorite books from our collection and let Brooklynites know what you recommend! Post a photo holding your selection on Twitter or Instagram and tag it #checkoutBKLYN.

Alex Lima, Poet

Poet Alex Lima recommends The Old Man and the Sea by Ernest Hemingway. 

Photo credit: Marcos Echeverria Ortiz

Dexter Henry, Reporter

AccuWeather National Reporter Dexter Henry recommends Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston.

Jason Reynolds, Author

Author Jason Reynolds recommends Red at the Bone by Jacqueline Woodson, Beloved by Toni Morrison, The Fire Next Time by James Baldwin, and Salvage the Bones by Jesmyn Ward

Nigel Barker, Photographer

Photographer Nigel Barker recommends F. Isabel Campoy's Quizás Algo Hermoso. 

Malik Yoba, Actor

Actor Malik Yoba recommends Peter Shaffer's Equus

Chris Bauer, Actor

Actor Chris Bauer recommends Siddhartha by Herman Hesse.

Michael C. Hall, Actor

Actor Michael C. Hall recommends John Williams' Stoner. 

LeVar Burton, Actor

Actor LeVar Burton recommends Shirin Yim Bridges' Ruby's Wish. 

Emma Stone, Actress

Emma Stone recommends Raise High the Roof Beam, Carpenters by J.D. Salinger.

Téa Leoni, Actress

Actress Téa Leoni recommends Leo Tolstoy's masterpiece, War and Peace.

Morena Baccarin, Actress

Morena Baccarin recommends The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald

Martin Freeman, Actor

Martin Freeman recommends Animal Farm by George Orwell.

Jim Parsons, Actor

Jim Parsons reccomends Charlotte's Web.

Ibi Zoboi, Author

Ibi Zoboi recommends Nancy Farmer's The Ear, the Eye, and the Arm.

Daniel José Older, Author

Daniel José Older recommends The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao by Junot Díaz.

Zetta Elliott, Author

Zetta Elliott recommends Kindred by Octavia Butler.

Jenny Han, Author

Jenny Han recommends I Capture the Castle by Dodie Smith.

Jesse Eisenberg, Actor

Jesse Eisenberg recommends The Brief, Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao by Junot Díaz.

Jeff Daniels, Actor

Jeff Daniels recommends The Ancient Minstrel by Jim Harrison.

Kenan Thompson, Actor

Kenan Thompson recommends the Dr. Seuss classic, Green Eggs and Ham.

Tituss Burgess, Actor

Tituss Burgess, visiting Greenpoint Library during a film shoot for the hit Netflix show Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt, recommended James Baldwin's collection of short stories, Going to Meet the Man.

@ShortTales

"Enjoying rereading a childhood favorite with my budding reader."

@epaukner

"The best things in life come free w/ a library card! #knowledgeispower #resist"

Peter Sarsgaard, Actor

Peter Sarsgaard recommends Malcolm Lowry's novel, Under the Volcano.

@GiliRW

"A favorite from BPL: The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian by Sherman Alexie - funny, raw, real, love."

Alec Baldwin, Actor

Alec Baldwin, visiting Central Library during a shoot for the upcoming Hulu television show The Looming Tower, recommended John Steinbeck's novella, The Red Pony.

Cat Greenleaf, Host of Talk Stoop

Cat Greenleaf and her bulldog, Gracie Greenleaf Rey, posing with their favorite book, The Little Prince.

Sophie Blackall, Illustrator

Sophie Blackall posing with her favorite book, THE SNOWY DAY by Ezra Jack Keats. Blackall will take home a Caldecott Medal for her book, FINDING WINNIE, at this week's ALA Annual Conference.

Peter Scanavino, Actor

From a recent Law and Order: SUV film shoot at Pacific Library.

Mariska Hargitay, Actor

From a recent Law and Order: SVU film shoot that took place at Pacific Library.

Ice-T, Rapper and Actor

"There's a lot in this book to learn from – you can translate the lessons from war to lessons about reality, conflict, and life."

DW Gibson, Winner of the 2015 Eagles Literary Prize for Nonfiction

Journalist and author DW Gibson's The Edge Becomes the Center: An Oral History of Gentrification in the Twenty-First Century was the inaugural winner of our 2015 Eagles Literary Prize—and we caught him browsing the stacks at our 2015 Brooklyn Classic with one of his own nonfiction favorites, the inimitable Joan Didion and her collection of essays, Slouching Towards Bethlehem.

Robert Cornegy, City Council Member

Council Member Robert Cornegy stopped by our Brower Park Library on Monday, October 19, to celebrate, well, Mondays! Thanks to increased funding from the Mayor's Office and the City Council, our libraries are open more hours than ever—and Brower Park kids got to celebrate with Council Member Cornegy and the cows of Click, Clack, Moo.

Robert Reich, Economist

Robert Reich is an economist, author, professor and political commentator — and we caught a minute with him during his recent talk at the Dweck Center to talk about Hilary Mantel's Bring Up the Bodies, a sprawling historical epic about the reign of Henry IV, his second wife Anne Boleyn and his shrewd advisor, Thomas Cromwell.

Adam J. Kurtz, Illustrator

Adam J. Kurtz, the inventive and whimsical Brooklyn-based illustrator who redesigned our iconic BKLYN Bookmobiles, picked Chabon's great The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay. "K&C was recommended by a friend and then I immediately forgot about it. When I saw a copy at a train station bookstore, I knew it was time. I read the book so fast and I was just so emotionally invested in it. Afterwards, I felt like I had lost someone close to me."

@themediarunner

"I like reading books in libraries."

@kotuonye

"My new thing is reading as procrastination. This is so good, but there's a suitcase around here somewhere... " — @kotuonye

@sslater310

Brooklyn Grace, from Boynton Beach, Florida, is only six days old! But her mom Stephanie (@sslater310) has a good idea what she'll be reading soon. 

Lisa Rosenblum, Chief Librarian, Brooklyn Public Library

"I loved reading the Little House series as a child. Not only do I enjoy historical fiction but I also liked reading about how self reliant the family was, making their own clothing and growing their own food.  In fact as a child I tried making the maple syrup taffy from snow recipe from one of the books.  It didn’t work –but I was amused to discover a number of people who have read the books tried the same thing!"

@JessicaEarlyLit

@JessicaEarlyLit shared this photo of two sleuths on the hunt for Waldo.

@jooopert

@jooopert recommends George Orwell's allegorical classic.

@brklynshoebabe

@brklynshoebabe checks out a steamy romance novel.

@elleninbrooklyn

@elleninbrooklyn and her cat Eliot both love Rainbow Rowell's Landline

@worldwithoutwww

"A friend asked me for my favorite book. It was a close call between this one and The Monster at the End of This Book." — @worldwithoutwww

David Woloch, Executive Vice President, External Affairs, Brooklyn Public Library

"I am a fan of political history generally and was excited to find this deep in the BPL stacks – I’m particularly fond of the author Isser Woloch!"

Bobby Simic, Neighborhood Library Supervisor, Greenpoint Library

"I'm a librarian because of the weird and wonderful Oz books. I used to bother the librarians incessantly at my local library in Indiana, trying to get any book in the series (even the not-so-great ones not by L. Frank Baum). The time spent at the Info Desk led me to become a library volunteer then a paid shelver, and, subsequently, library school and eventually a librarian at Brooklyn Public Library."

Simon Kenton, young patron

"I like Shark Vs. Train. I think Shark will win." -- Simon Kenton, age 3.

Leila Taylor, Creative Director, Brooklyn Public Library

"Perec reveals the depth and complexity in the basic aspects of our everyday life we normally ignore. If you stop and really pay attention, there are stories everywhere. A shopping list is a biography, your daily commute is a map of your city."

Edwin Maxwell, Neighborhood Library Supervisor, New Lots Library

"I love a great underdog story! David and Goliath provides real-life accounts on how countless people have transformed their perceived weaknesses into their greatest strengths. In facing every-day hardships, it provides me with inspiration that I can, too!"

Eva Raison, Immigrant Services Coordinator

"Doce Cuentos Peregrinos is an absorbing book that collects stories that Garcia-Marquez told and revised over many years.  I love the nostalgia, disillusion, and delicate sense of mortality that permeate these stories.

Este libro envolvente representa trabajos de Garcia-Márquez que desarrolló a través de muchos años.  Me encantan los ambientes de nostalgia, la desilusión y el delicado sentido de mortalidad presentes en estas historias."
 

Theodore B. Olson, Gala Awardee

Ted Olson is a lawyer and former U.S. Solicitor General to George W. Bush, and is perhaps most famous for his unlikely partnership with David Boies and their historic fight to overturn California’s Proposition 8, detailed in their book Redeeming the Dream: The Case of Marriage Equality. When we honored Mr. Olson at our 2015 Gala, he explained that southern Gothic is one of his favorite genres, and that The Snopes Dilemma: Faulkner’s Trilogy made excellent study of Faulkner’s classic characters.

Javaka Steptoe, Author and Illustrator

Visiting the Dweck Center in February 2014 as part of our "Meet the Author/Illustrator" series, children’s author and illustrator Javaka Steptoe picked up a copy of Round Trip by Ann Jonas.

Diana Reyna, Deputy Borough President

Children in the Central Library Youth Wing had a lovely story time with Diana Reyna, Deputy Borough President, during Read Across America in March 2015. She told us that her favorite children’s book is No, David! by David Shannon.

Michael Chernus, Actor

Actor Michael Chernus, known for his work on Netflix’s Orange is the New Black as Cal, Piper’s haplessly thoughtful brother, was at Central Library while shooting an upcoming film with director Joshua Marston (in an elevator with Michael Shannon!). He’s a big fan of fellow Brooklynite Jonathan Franzen’s dazzling debut novel, The Corrections.

Dan Zanes, Musician

Dan Zanes came to Flatbush Library to help us kick off a Summer Reading 2015 with the Book-a-Loo Boogie! Along with his friend and producer Father Goose, they sang Caribbean songs and danced with the kids in a train all around the room. Dan’s favorite children’s stories are those classic Moomins of Finland, by Tove Jansson. 

Rita Meade, Library Information Supervisor, Bay Ridge Library

"I chose A Tree Grows in Brooklyn by Betty Smith because I've loved it since I was a kid. It's a wonderful coming-of-age story, it's a wonderful New York story, and the writing is honest and beautiful. Plus, it contains one of my favorite quotes from a book: 'From that moment on, the world was hers for the reading. She would never be lonely again.'"

Cindi Leive, Editor-in-Chief of Glamour Magazine

Cindi Leive is a BPL Trustee and a member of the Whitman Circle, a group that helps provide vital funding for outreach initiatives, youth programs, services for older adultsand of course, books. At a recent Whitman Circle event, she selected The House of Mirth by Edith Wharton as a recommended read, in e-book format.

Lev Grossman, Author

Lev Grossman is the author of the wildly successful Magicians trilogy, so obviously he appreciates the fantastical realms and epic multi-volume sagas. Who better captured that than C.S. Lewis with his remarkable Narnian Chronicles? We found a beautiful old copy of The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe in our Hunt Collection, to show off to Lev at our 2015 Gala.

Frank Bruni, The New York Times

Frank Bruni, journalist for The New York Times and formerly that paper’s chief restaurant critic, moderated a discussion at our 2015 Gala, but before the festivities started, we caught him reading one of his favorite books, Nora Ephron’s Heartburn

Evangeline Lilly, Actor

Evangeline Lilly, an author and leading actress from the hit ABC series LOST, visited us at Central Library in November 2014 to read aloud from her new book The Squickerwonkers. One of her main influences? Dr. Seuss! She recommended the classic Green Eggs and Ham while on-site.

Kazuo Ishiguro, Author

Kazuo Ishiguro came to Brooklyn to talk about The Buried Giant, his latest novel and an epic masterpiece that explores memory and forgetting in a fantastical medieval England. His favorite book is Jane Eyre, also a darkly moving story of hidden truths and the power of love in hopeless times. 

Rachel Weisz, Actor

Actress Rachel Weisz, who won an Academy Award for her role in The Constant Gardener (and won us over for her portrayal of librarian Evelyn Carnahan in The Mummy) swung by Central Library while shooting an upcoming film with director Joshua Marston, which included a tense scene in the Dweck lobby bathrooms! She told us her favorite book was Carson McCullers’ The Member of the Wedding, reading a few pages in between takes.

Anusha Bala, Assistant to the President & CEO, Brooklyn Public Library

To totally misquote Mindy Kaling, “favorite book isn’t a book; it’s a tier.” And Hellhound on His Trail by Hampton Sides is definitely on my tier. It’s an amazing combination of thoroughly researched history, compelling narrative, fascinating character exploration (of MLK Jr., James Earl Ray and his many aliases, the town of Memphis, and several other supporting characters), and mystery/thriller. Sides’ books all take moments in history and make them come alive through studies of the actors involved and this one was the one I truly couldn’t put down!

Father Goose, Producer

Father Goose, reggae producer in Brooklyn, came to Flatbush Library to help us kick off a Summer Reading 2015 with the Book-a-Loo Boogie! with his friend, musician Dan Zanes. As a nod to his own name, he checked out some classic Mother Goose fairy tales.

Tom Finkelpearl, Commissioner, NYC Department of Cultural Affairs

While attending a meeting at BPL in February 2015, Commissioner of Cultural Affairs Tom Finklepearl recommended Authentic Happiness by Martin E. P. Seligman, PhD.

Michael Shannon, Actor

Actor Michael Shannon, well known around Brooklyn for his role in HBO’s Boardwalk Empire, was at Central Library while shooting an upcoming film with director Joshua Marston (in an elevator with Michael Chernus!). His favorite book is Herman Hesse’s epic tale of self-discovery, Siddhartha.

Melissa Mark-Viverito, Speaker of the New York City Council

Melissa Mark-Viverito joined fellow NYC Councilmembers at Central Library to sign up for IDNYC in January 2015. The new card, free for all NYC residents, helps connect all New Yorkers to City services and programs, as well as cultural institutions citywide. She recommended Isabel Allende’s La Isla Bajo el Mar from our foreign language collection.

Linda E. Johnson, President and CEO, Brooklyn Public Library

"I selected Stones from the River by Ursula Hegi because it is beautifully written and tells a compelling personal story that is interesting and politically important. This book has been on my mind recently, years after I first read it – always a mark of a great book!"

Doreen Cronin, Author

Author of the beloved children’s book Click, Clack, Moo, Cows That Type, Doreen Cronin read her book aloud to Brooklyn children on March 6, 2015, as part of BPL’s celebration of Read Across America. She selected another classic, Harold and the Purple Crayon by Crockett Johnson as a favorite.

Leonard Lopate, WNYC radio host and author

Leonard Lopate grew up in Brooklyn, and remembers coming to the library as a kid! One of his life-changing reads was Bernard Malamud’s The Natural, he told us at our 2015 Gala.

Robin Lester Kenton, Vice President, Marketing & Communications, Brooklyn Public Library

"Random Family by Adrian Nicole LeBlanc had a huge impact on my life and my worldview. A compelling true story about the lives of New Yorkers in the Bronx, the personal connections they make and the cultural cycle of poverty, it inspired me to pursue a graduate degree in sociology. I recommend this page-turning ethnography to everyone!"

Emma Straub, Author

Emma Straub is the author of The Vacationers and Laura Lamont’s Life in Pictures, and she’s also a huge fan of George Eliot’s Middlemarch, which is packed with sly witticisms and wry commentary on womanhood.

Selvon Smith, VP of IT Telecom, Brooklyn Public Library

"My daughter and I are always reading together. I'll leave it up to you to decide whose selection is whose."

Eric Adams, Brooklyn Borough President

Adams selected a childhood favorite, Curious George by H. A. Rey, as a recommended read.

Simcha Felder, NY State Senator

State Senator Simcha Felder picked up a copy of the Keillor Reader by Garrison Keillor during a visit to our Kings Highway branch.

Noah Emmerich, Actor

FX’s The Americans shot a scene at BPL’s Central Library in January 2014. While on site, series star Noah Emmerich picked up Enemies Within: Inside the NYPD's Secret Spying Unit and bin Laden's Final Plot Against America by Matt Apuzzo and Adam Goldman. Here he is with his selection on the set of the show.

Benicio del Toro, Actor

BPL served as a filming location for the White House's 1 is 2 Many PSA against campus sexual assault in March 2014. Actor Benicio del Toro filmed a scene at the Library, and recommended The Call of the Wild by Jack London.

Mayor Bill de Blasio and First Lady Chirlane McCray

While attending a New York City Department of Education Universal Pre-K info session at BPL in March 2014, the Mayor and First Lady took a moment to recommend one of their favorite books: Nothing to Fear: FDR's Inner Circle and the Hundred Days That Created Modern America by Adam Cohen.