Tuesday, March 26, 2013

My Reading Journey

Day 26 of 31 at Two Writing Teachers!
Earlier this month, Christy wrote about her "book self" and linked  to the Ideal Bookshelf project.  Wow, what a cool idea, right?

Books and reading are such an important part of who I am.  My first sentence was "Daddy sitting reading paper."  My kindergarten teacher came to our house to study it because she wanted to know why I was so far ahead in my reading.  My elementary school freaked out because I entered 1st grade reading at a 5th grade reading level.  (They were afraid of not having enough books to challenge me.  My mom and I just went to the public library every week with a laundry basket!)

Some of my earliest memories are of reading with my parents.  I can still hear my parents' voices reading favorite lines of favorite books.  We loved to curl up and read delightful books like:
As a child and tween, I was a book monster.  I devoured just about any book I could get my hands on.  (I think the only book I ever abandoned was The Old Man and The Sea... sorry, Hemingway!)  Every summer, my goal was to read over 100 books, and I easily met it every time.

In those blissful days, my reading self enjoyed:


I can't even begin to list the books I hungrily consumed during that time, but I know that at some point in middle school, I started running out of books.  My mom took me to the library in the next city over because I'd read all the books I wanted to read at our library.  Mary Higgins Clark (loved that her titles all came from song lyrics!) and Lillian Jackson Braun (The Cat Who...) got me through most of middle school, but I was really stuck when I finished their series.  It didn't really help that I was so far ahead in my reading that I had already read most "middle school" literature in elementary school.

I did start to seriously devour poetry at this time, including The Dream Keeper and Muse of Fire (which I think was one of my mom's old textbooks, but it was in the house, and it had good poetry inside!)

Sadly, my clearest reading memory from middle school is being forced through the weeks of worksheets and quizzes on White Fang even though I had just read it the previous summer for pleasure.  I prided myself on acing them all without even cracking the book back open.

I was going to write all the way up to my current self, but this post is already too long... so tune in tomorrow!  :-)

8 comments:

  1. I was reading so many books at my local library in Finnish that I had to start improving my English so that I could read books in English. That habit has stayed with me. I have read some of the same books as you, but in Finnish!
    Wondering what should I read during spring break??

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    1. That's neat, Jaana! I've read a lot of these in Spanish too -- they were the first books I went for when my Spanish got good enough to read books independently!

      This Spring Break I'm reading The Best Bad Luck I Ever Had and the 2nd book in the False Prince series. Are you on Goodreads? I'd love to share books with you!

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  2. You were and continue to be a reading machine. Did you ever read Agatha Christie books? I was so bummed when I found out I'd read all of the her books and she wouldn't be writing anymore because she was dead.
    I think you are in the right job, convincing students reading is good. Your post goes along with Michelle's today. I think your parents followed all of her how to turn a child into a reader.

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    1. I did read some Agatha Christie too, Elsie. I love that you were disappointed she couldn't write anymore because she wasn't alive! That's too funny! I missed Michelle's post, but I'll have to look at it now!

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  3. And you are why I like to teach gifted students, Jennifer. I suspect I might have given you a few books back in middle school, & beyond. What a story, & I wish your librarian might have found some more for you too. What a wonderful mom to find still another library for you. I suspect many of us should be on Goodreads together, don't you?

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    1. I've loved sharing books with you on Goodreads, Linda! It would be fun if all the slicers were friends on there, since so many of us are readers! :-)

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  4. I can't resist a post that beckons with the words - My Reading Journey. My daughter has always been a voracious reader, so much so that I tell her she inhales books! I can't wait to read for tomorrow's post. Check out The Lions of Little Rock, it's by the same author as The Best Bad Luck I Ever Had.

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    1. Your daughter sounds just like me, Ramona! I already read Lions of Little Rock several weeks ago, and I loved it! :-)

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