I've often wondered if the love of reading is a result of genetics or
environment. As the daughter of a woman who never read for pleasure and
a man who made weekly treks to a public library, hauling home multiple
books each trip, I landed squarely in the read-to-excess group. Still,
I'm not sure it just happened out of the clear blue. In addition to
seeing Dad sitting on the couch, reading every night, I also attended
schools with rigorous, year-round reading lists. What began as an
annoying academic requirement soon blossomed into a love affair.
My father knew the importance of good grades, so he gave me a quarter
for every "A" I brought home on periodic report cards (yes, I am that
old). Of course, twenty-five cents is unlikely to incentivize many
students today, but researchers found long ago that avid readers develop
superior skills that far surpass good spelling and larger vocabularies.
Grammar, writing and speaking ability, general knowledge and I.Q. all
expand with reading.
Curling up on my sofa with a book is such a deep pleasure that the seat
cushion has developed Dad's telltale depression that my brother and I
once snickered at. Yet where my father's stack of library books was
quite modest, I have a coffee table with multiple sloping piles,
patiently waiting their turn. My to-read Everest is out of control.
Magazines are relegated to in-flight reading to spare myself the agony
of tossing unread print material into the trash.
Those of you who are yelling at this page, telling me to get a
Kindle...yeah, I have one, and it only exacerbates the problem. Towers
of books can, at least, physically rebuke me by their visual presence.
Downloaded ebooks are imprisoned in a thin, black orphanage, emitting
no sense of urgency.
For decades at my house, spring cleaning did not apply to books. Until Hurricane Katrina.
Although my treasured books were not damaged, I decided to move from a
four bedroom house with two large attics to a townhouse with no attic.
It became clear that I must learn to survive without my textbooks and
anthologies from college at the very least. Potential loading and
unloading friends could be enticed with the promise of no 100-pound
boxes of books to lift.
Seven garage sales followed over a two month period. The ten-cent books flew off the table.
As I continue to downsize, it's become easier to part with things. I was
actually doing quite well...very well indeed...until I started to write
books as well as read them.
So, just let me know if you'd like a German 101 book from 1968.
(Note that this is a repost from my recent contribution to the GIRL WHO READS blog).
Saturday, July 11, 2015
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