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Date: | Wed, 4 Jun 2008 20:37:19 -0400 |
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It doesn't have to be great literature for a kid to benefit. I went
through a phase where I read every single book by Frank Yerby. I didn't
know at the time that he had one plot and just changed the names of the
characters and the locale for each lame novel; I thought I was reading
real grown up stuff. Now and then I see one of his books at a used book
sale, look at a few pages, chuckle, and thank him for his gift to a
child desperate to be a grown up. One of the highlights of my education
was in a small and dusty town in South Dakota where some astute
librarian gave me a free access library card as opposed to the
children's restricted card and I discovered that I owned the world
right there in the town hall basement. Like you, Geoff, it was later
pure delight to visit and feel I knew places that I had earlier known
only in books. Like chocolate, reading has to be one of the gifts of
the gods. Joan
>> Not all were great literature but they
>> stimulated all sorts of things in me. Mary Renault's "The King Must
>> Die" and
>> her series of other novels about ancient Greece has left me with a
>> life-long
>> interest in the ancient world. I picked up my Mum's school copy of
>> "Pride
>> and Prejudice" and loved it.
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