Reflection on the Power of Stories

The Power of Stories

The Lillian H. Smith branch of the Toronto Public Library.

Stories are powerful and integral to the library and human connection.  The super power of human beings is that we are able to cooperate in large numbers through the power of stories (Harari, 2022). How can libraries harness the power of stories as a tool for inclusion, connection, and empathy?

“Libraries have should keep stories, share stories and make stories.”

-Erik Boekesteijn (Stephens, 2019).

A few days ago, I was helping a senior at the library.  She was looking for social programs she could attend at the library.  Her doctor prescribed it.  She has been living with vision loss over the last few years and has not been able to enjoy the things she used to.  We found some drop in programs for seniors that she can try in the neighbourhood but I also suggested she give audiobooks a try.  Although she would still be alone, a good story does offer comfort and can be great company.

It’s no wonder that the ice-breaker group invites the people in this class to share binge-able media!  This allowed us to make connections to each other through the shared experience of the story and helped us find new media to consume.  For many people, watching media, reading or listening to stories, is part of their self-care.

Collecting Stories

Artist, author, and library staff Christina Wong has always been passionate about collecting stories.  In 2015, she collected and exhibited stories connected to Toronto’s Chinatown and the Boys and Girls House Library (which opened in 1922 then later replaced by a new construction in 1995 renamed the Lillian H. Smith branch) for the 20th anniversary of the  library.  Unfortunately, the link to the online exhibit is no longer active.  Her work, along with her collaborators, have been focused on people and their connection to disappearing places through stories.  These projects are vital to recording the history of the city as neighbourhoods grapple with rapid changes and disappearing landmarks.

Illustration of Kim Moon Bakery by Daniel Innes, from Denison Avenue (Wong & Innes, 2023).
Kim Moon Bakery (BlogTO, 2008) was a popular bakery and restaurant in Toronto’s Chinatown which closed in 2013. This bakery holds a special place in my heart. As a young teenager, my early forays downtown included visits to Kim Moon Bakery with my friends, ordering endless pots of tea, eating pastries, and laughing.

Another place where “Torontonians can contribute their stories, memories, artifacts,” according to Wong (Jennifer, 2015) is the Museum of Toronto.  It began as a workshop in 2015 and now has a physical home at 401 Richmond Street West which is free to visit.  The current exhibit is called The 52: Stories of women who shaped Toronto.  These powerful stories which can be viewed online or in person, as text, video, or performance.

The Human Story and AI

I was reading an article in the NYTimes about a man about to lose his father to illness, persuaded him to work with a company called StoryFile to help preserve his memory.  I found this to be revelatory!  There are increasing numbers of companies in the field called GriefTech. From apps that help people deal with loss to avatars that will allow you to talk to your loved one through a screen, like you were talking to them on Zoom (Dominus, 2025).  I wondered how this kind of technology will change how we preserve stories at the library.  What are the costs of preserving someone in the form of an AI chatbot in perpetuity and what format can it be preserved in?  Will archives and special collections collect AI simulations of people such as the Japanese American National Museum’s exhibit allowing people to talk to World War II veteran Lawson Sakai (2021)?


References

Blog TO. (2008, July 12). Kim Moon.  https://www.blogto.com/restaurants/kimmoon/

Dominus, S. (2025, June 13). Never say goodbye. The New York Times Magazine. https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2025/06/13/magazine/ai-avatar-life-death.html

Harari, Y. N. (2022). Unstoppable us: How humans took over the world, Vol. 1. Puffin Canada.

Japanese American National Museum. (2021, November 24). The interactive StoryFile of Lawson Iichiro Sakai-exibition preview [Video]. YouTube. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JgfSHGJuw2I

Jennifer. (2015, October 16). Q & A with Lillian H. Smith’s digital storyteller Christina Wong. https://torontopubliclibrary.typepad.com/lillian-h-smith/2015/10/qa-with-lillian-h-smiths-digital-storyteller-christina-wong.html

Museum of Toronto. (2025). The 52: Stories of women who transformed Toronto. https://museumoftoronto.com/projects/the-52/

Stephens, M. (2019).  Wholehearted librarianship: Finding hope, inspiration, and balance.  ALA Editions.

Wong, C. & Innes, D. (2023). Denison Avenue. ECW Press.

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