8/6/25

2025 National Book Festival & Great Reads Selections!

The 2025 National Book Festival is Saturday, September 6, 2025!
Discover Great Reads from Great Places with the Roadmap to Reading at the 2025 Library of Congress National Book Festival! The 56 Affiliate Centers for the Book each selected one book for Young Readers and one for Adult Readers to celebrate the people and places around our nation. Visit each stop on the Roadmap to Reading in Hall D of the Walter E. Washington Convention Center in Washington, D.C. from 9 a.m.- 8 p.m., or create your own National Book Festival experience with the Library of Congress online by engaging in virtual author conversations, listening to a podcast, reading the blog, and more!

For a link to the author lineup of more than 90 authors at the festival, click here.

The Center for the Book at the New Hampshire State Library has selected the book, Pitch Perfect and Persistent!: The Musical Debut of Amy Cheney Beach by Caitlin DeLems as our 2025 selection for Young Readers. 

Amy Marcy Cheney was born in Henniker, New Hampshire on September 5, 1867. By the age of four, Amy had composed three waltzes, despite the absence of a piano. Amy began formal piano lessons with her mother at age six, and by age eight the family had moved to Chelsea, Massachusetts to further her musical education. During the course of her lifetime, Amy accomplished many musical firsts, including being the first American woman to compose and publish a symphony. In 1944, Amy Cheney Beach died and is buried with her husband, Dr. Henry Harris Aubrey Beach outside of Boston, Massachusetts.

The Center for the Book at the New Hampshire State Library has selected the book, To Anyone Who Ever Asks: the Life, Music, and Mystery of Connie Converse by Howard Fishman as our 2025 selection for Adult Readers.

Elizabeth Eaton “Connie” Converse was born in Laconia, New Hampshire on August 3, 1924, and raised in Concord, New Hampshire. She attended Concord High School, where she was valedictorian. Converse attended Mount Holyoke College in Massachusetts for two years before moving to New York City where she began writing songs. In August 1974, Converse left her family home in search of a new life and was not seen or heard from again. Despite some small success early on in her music career, Connie’s music was not recognized until the 21st century with the release of a song compilation and the publication of this biography. 

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