Abstract. This paper explores how families select books for leisure reading. We recruited 17 families (adults and children) for this study, and spent time with each in both bookshops and public libraries. Our research aims to add to understanding of how families interact with books and bookshelves in these places, and how digital libraries might best support the shared needs of these inter-generational users. Much of our understanding of how an eBook should look and feel comes from generalizations about books and assumptions about the needs of those individuals who read them. We explore how children and adults search and browse for books together, with specific focus on the type of information seeking tasks that families undertake and on the families' shared search and browsing strategies. We further explore the implications of this study for the development of digital libraries for children and families.Keywords: participant observation, social space, collaborative information behaviour, families.
IntroductionWe report here on an observational study exploring how family groups interacted with books in both library and bookshop environments. We aim for an added understanding of families' book selection strategies in these places, to provide insight into how digital libraries could be designed to support the collaborative family behaviour observed in physical environments. We conducted interviews and observations with 17 family groups who each visitied both a public library and a bookshop. Previous investigations of children's information behaviour have rarely focussed on recreational reading and family groups. Similarly, most digital libraries for children focus on supporting the needs of an individual child searching for a book on their own. We see in this present study and in an earlier study [1] that for children, the practice of searching for a book is often far more social than individual. The process of search, interaction and decision making is often completed in collaboration with, or, alongside a parent or sibling.The remainder of the paper is structured as follows: Section 2 discusses related work on children and book/ebook selection in physical and digital libraries. Section 3