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As Hong Kong libraries reopen, readers return to pick up a book, find respite from pandemic

  • Cleaning, disinfection increased, fewer seats provided, and all library users must wear masks
  • Reading groups resume activities for children online, stores report brisk sales of e-books

Reading Time:4 minutes
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A young girl in a mask reads at book at the Hong Kong Central Library in Causeway Bay after it reopened to the public. Photo: Winson Wong

For years, Jason Wong put aside a day for himself at a library every weekend, when he would browse through his favourite fantasy novels, and take home one or two that he could not put down.

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The 32-year-old clerk says reading in libraries has been a great form of escapism, but the Covid-19 pandemic disrupted his routine by forcing their closure.

Being unable to read in an open, calm environment has been a struggle, says Wong, who has frequented libraries since his secondary schooldays and is a fan of books like JRR Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings.

At first, he had difficulty coming up with other things to do while confined at home in North Point, where he lives with his parents and a younger brother. He also put off visits to bookstores with friends to avoid gathering.

People queue up to enter the Hong Kong Central Library. Photo: Winson Wong
People queue up to enter the Hong Kong Central Library. Photo: Winson Wong
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“Books provide me an emotional and creative outlet,” he says. “But the pandemic and its disruptions have forced me to bottle up many of my thoughts and emotions.”

Like Wong, many readers in Hong Kong have been disheartened by the closure of public libraries and suspension of book events and reading activities.

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