Turning Pages Project

Join us in our mission to provide essential reading materials to inmates, helping them combat anxiety and hopelessness. Together, we can make a difference in their lives through literacy and support.

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Call Us: (513) 294-7000

info@turningpagesproject.com

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A discarded magazine or book can bring hope to inmates.

At Turning Pages Project, we believe in the power of reading to transform lives. Our mission is to provide library materials to inmates, helping them combat anxiety and hopelessness. By donating magazines and educational resources, we aim to foster literacy and mental well-being among those incarcerated. Over two thirds of the inmate population struggle with literacy. Our focus on accessible reading materials, including children’s magazines, ensures that every inmate can find solace and joy in reading. Join us in our journey to support rehabilitation and prevent suicide through the gift of literacy.

Support the Turning Pages Project in providing essential reading materials to inmates. Your contribution helps alleviate anxiety and promotes literacy, giving them hope and a chance for a better future. Together, we can make a difference in their lives.

Empowering Inmates Through Reading

Join the Turning Pages Project

Help Us Save Lives

Literacy Matters

At Turning Pages Project, we believe in the transformative power of reading. Our mission is to provide library materials to inmates, helping them cope with anxiety and hopelessness. With over nine years of experience, we collect and donate magazines, ensuring that even those with limited literacy can find solace in images and stories. By fostering a love for reading, we aim to reduce the risk of suicide and promote mental well-being among incarcerated individuals. Join us in making a difference, one page at a time!

JESSUP, MARYLAND- AUGUST 23:
Portrait of Jessup inmate Arlando “Tray” Jones in the prison library. Tray was in the Prison Scholars Program at the Jessup Correctional Institution, a maximum security prison in Maryland where he and other inmates joined 15 Georgetown students for a semester long class where both groups worked closely together to explore and develop proposals for prison reform. (Photo by Lucian Perkins /for The Washington Post via Getty Images)