Supporting Reading Experiences for Children

Scotts provide gifts to book festival in tribute to mother

Jilleen Moore (left) leads story time at Square Books Jr. in Oxford with Juniper Dutson, Benjamin and Michele Ard, Anne Carter and Sarah Abraham, and Dylan Dutson. Just like story time, the Children’s Book Festival at the university encourages a love of reading, and the festival has received major support from the family of the late Elaine Hoffman Scott of Little Rock, Arkansas. Photo by Bill Dabney/UM Foundation

OXFORD, Miss. – Elementary school students will be encouraged to love reading, thanks to a University of Mississippi endowment paying tribute to the late Elaine Hoffman Scott, of Little Rock, Arkansas, remembered for her great passion for education and the arts.

The Elaine Hoffman Scott Memorial Endowment and Memorial Fund, which will support the Children’s Book Festival, were established with $72,000 in gifts from her son, Bran Scott, of San Jose, California; and daughters Melissa Scott, of Chapel Hill, North Carolina; and Caitlin Scott, of Petaluma, California.

Part of the university’s Oxford Conference for the Book – which highlights achievements of seasoned and emerging Southern writers through an annual gathering of teachers, publishers, booksellers, writers, scholars, agents, editors and book lovers – the Children’s Book Festival serves more than 1,200 first and fifth graders from schools in Lafayette County and Oxford.

Bran Scott said the gift was inspired by the desire to establish something “lasting and life-giving” that provides a tangible benefit to the causes his mother valued.

“My mom was passionate about education and about reading, particularly for children,” he said. “She understood the lifelong impact a childhood with books could produce. She believed that books open doors to other worlds – real and imaginary – and that a child who has experienced a universe of worlds through books becomes an adult who believes bigger and better worlds are possible.

“The Children’s Book Festival was the perfect choice because it’s an event that engenders the love of books and reading in the children of a community she dearly loved.”

Melissa Scott agreed, saying, “Mom thought every person should have the chance to experience everything books can bring, and she thought the best way to help that happen was to make books available to children as early as possible.”

Elaine Scott supported the Friends of the Central Arkansas Library System and ran book giveaways for Reading Is Fundamental, for which she won the RIF Leader Award in 1994. When the Oxford Conference for the Book began, she immediately got involved with the Children’s Book Festival to introduce readers to a range of books and authors.

Elaine Hoffman Scott

“Mom was excited by every author who came to the festival, and she read their books and loved interviewing them,” Melissa said. “I remember the year the featured authors had written a book on unusual things that people can eat, and they brought an electric skillet and cooked fried worms.

“They offered samples to the horrified and delighted audience, mostly kids, and Mom promptly volunteered. She bragged for years that she had eaten worms, and they were pretty tasty.

“But she also got a bunch of those kids to try the worms and to try the book. If she’d taste worms to get readers excited, the Children’s Book Festival seemed like the ideal place to remember her.”

Caitlin Scott said her mother “loved a good story.”

“As the years passed, my mom became increasingly convinced of the importance of being able to read, to learn the great stories of history and to tell one’s own story,” she said.

“A formative experience of my life was being able to volunteer with her at RIF book distributions, where each child got to choose two books to take home and keep forever. The excitement was palpable, as children rushed to the tables of books to make their selections. I also boldly gave the kids advice about what books they should choose.”

Kathryn McKee, director of the UM Center for the Study of Southern Culture and McMullan Professor of Southern Studies, shared how the honoree was involved with the center.

“For many years, Elaine Scott was an enthusiastic participant in various dimensions of life at the Center for the Study of Southern Culture,” she said. “She was an early and long-standing member of the center’s advisory committee, a faithful attendee of the Faulkner and Yoknapatawpha Conference, and a regular participant in the Oxford Conference for the Book.

“Elaine had a particular soft spot for the Children’s Book Festival, and now that event will flourish for years to come with this kind support from her children.”

The center works with the Lafayette County Literacy Council, Junior Auxiliary of Oxford, Square Books Jr., and Lafayette County and Oxford Public Library to select and host authors who present programs to first and fifth graders. Lafayette County and Oxford Elementary School librarians make author suggestions and create activities for the children to enjoy during the week the authors visit.

The conference then invites those authors to sign books at Square Books Jr. The 2022 event, hosted in the Gertrude C. Ford Center for the Performing Arts, featured Rajani LaRocca speaking to first graders about her book “Where Three Oceans Meet” and to fifth graders about her book “Midsummer’s Mayhem.”

Elaine Scott spent her formative years in Oxford, where her father, Mark Hoffman, was chair of the UM Department of Music. A recipient of a Lion’s Oil Scholarship, she earned a bachelor’s degree in English at Wellesley College in 1957.

After marrying Isaac Alexander Scott Jr. and working as a middle school teacher in Springdale, Arkansas, she returned to Ole Miss for a master’s degree in English. She then settled in Little Rock, where she lived more than 50 years.

Rajani LaRocca was the featured author for the 2022 Children’s Book Festival, which will be supported by the Elaine Hoffman Scott Memorial Endowment and Memorial Fund created by her children. LaRocca read from her books ‘Where Three Oceans Meet’ and ‘Midsummer’s Mayhem.’ Submitted photo

“One of the things she loved about the university was its willingness, starting in the 1970s, to move outside of traditional academic boundaries,” Melissa Scott said. “That expansive vision was also something she saw in the Center for Southern Culture and the Southern Foodways Alliance, and something she valued greatly.

“The other vital thing she took away from her time at the university was her lifelong friendship with Ann Abadie, who was a major force behind all of the things I have mentioned. They met while Mom was working toward her master’s degree and remained close ever since.”

Among Elaine Scott’s most satisfying endeavors was serving on the State Board of Education from 1985 to 1997. She also taught in the Department of English at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock.

To make a gift to the Elaine Hoffman Scott Memorial Endowment, send a check, with the fund’s name written in the memo line, to the University of Mississippi Foundation, 406 University Ave., Oxford, MS 38655; or give online at https://give.olemiss.edu.

For more information on supporting the Children’s Book Festival, contact Delia Childers, associate director of development for the College of Liberal Arts, at dgchilde@olemiss.edu or 662-915-3086.