Turning Pages, Changing Lives: The Magic of Bibliotherapy

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Portrait of Emely Rumble

In 2020, Emely Rumble, M.S.W. ’10, LCSW, was settled in a career she loved as a school social worker in the Bronx, but life had a different plan. As the COVID pandemic turned the world upside down, Emely’s two-year-old son was diagnosed with autism and she became pregnant with her second child. “And so I was one of those two million women who had to leave the workforce,” she said ruefully.

NAME: Emely Rumble 
DEGREE: M.S.W. ’10 
LOCATION: Bronx, NY

Fortunately, Emely had the skills and experience to remake her career. She had been working with a group practice part time and had long considered establishing a private practice, but hadn’t because she loved her work in schools. “I think this was the momentum, or maybe the challenge, that I needed to knock me off my seat to get it done.” Additionally, this was her chance to more fully pursue her love of bibliotherapy.  

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Emely identifies books to use in her work with her bibliotherapy clients.

Emely had started incorporating bibliotherapy into her practice when she interned at a facility for adults with schizophrenia, running socialization groups focused on reading and writing poetry. As a school social worker, she used storytelling in English language arts classrooms. “We’d come up with alternative endings to stories, do role-playing, write letters to the main characters—getting the kids really interested in fictional stories. And then as a result of that, getting them telling their own stories and learning each other’s stories.”

With her move to private practice, Emely launched LiterapyNYC—“Where literature and therapy meet to provide the everyday bibliophile with mental health support and diverse reading recommendations.” Bibliotherapy uses literature to help clients make sense of their concerns and see them from different perspectives. Emely incorporates bibliotherapy into her psychotherapy practice with New York clients and offers it as a coaching service to those outside of the state. To further broaden her qualifications, Emely is training with the International Federation of Bibliopoetry Therapy to become a certified poetry therapist (CPT).

In addition to working with clients, Emely teaches bibliotherapy in the CUNY/Queens College master of library science program. She has collaborated in the past with The Bronx is Reading, who nominated her as a Mover & Shaker of the Year in 2023, and has built close relationships with her local librarians, often making recommendations of diverse books to acquire.

With a busy professional life and a young family, Emely structures her days to ensure she consistently incorporates practices to nurture her own mental health. This usually means starting at 5 a.m. “I try to have that little bit of time in the morning for myself, for prayer, meditation, to be able to drink my coffee hot and just to have a quiet start to the day.”

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Emely and her daughter at school.

By 6:30 a.m., she is taking the kids to school. She uses that commute time—walking and riding public transportation—to read, listen to audiobooks or music and move her body.

Back home, Emely will respond to emails and prepare for her workday. From 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. she sees psychotherapy clients via telemed. Then she’s out again at 1:30 to pick up her children. Once they’ve settled into activities and homework, she’ll focus on networking, writing blog posts and other tasks to develop her still nascent business, as well as prepare for her bibliotherapy sessions.

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Seeing clients virtually gives Emely the space to lead a balanced life.

At 4:30, Emely’s husband, a middle school educator, returns home and takes over parenting. This gives her concentrated time from 5 to 8 p.m. to see clients. On some evenings, she’ll also participate in a peer group session—part of a supervision group of women of color in private practice, a crucial part of her professional life. “Without professional support and professional collaborations, I wouldn’t be where I’m at today, honestly,” she said.

This is also a time where she may do podcast interviews or work on revisions of her book, Bibliotherapy in the Bronx, which will be published by Row House Publishing in April of 2025.

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Portrait of Emely Rumble

Hopefully, by 8:30 p.m. Emely and her husband have gotten the kids into bed so they can spend some time together before they go to sleep. This may be time to read and enjoy the quiet. But like many of us, they may just use this time to relax on the couch and watch Netflix, she admitted.