Black librarian a book fair founder

T he 25th anniversary of the Miami Book Fair International is a milestone for Miami Dade College and the community. November 9 through 16, thousands of book lovers are expected to attend readings and discussions featuring prize-winning, best -selling and emerging authors from the United States and around the world. A quote from The New York Times states “the current wave of book fairs in many ways stems from the Miami Book Fair, which got its start in 1983 and has come to be the model for the others.”

In 2002, the Fair became part of Miami Dade College’s Florida Center for Literary Arts. According to the center’s executive director, Alina Interian, “In 25 years, thanks to our many partners and, especially, the community we serve, the Book Fair has grown into the largest, finest and most innovative literary gathering in the hemisphere.”

One who was active in the creation of the Miami Book Fair was librarian Juanita Ross Johnson. She was born and raised in Mississippi. A graduate of Fisk University in Nashville with a major in history, she earned a master’s degree in library science from Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland.

Full article here.