His article caused me to reflect on how I came to love reading.
How was I, a middle-class white girl raised in a stable two-parent home, able
to empathize with Huck Finn's being abused by his drunken father or with Helen
Keller's struggle to communicate despite being blind and deaf? These
were not my experiences, yet as I read these stories, I was able to imagine
myself in their shoes. Clearly these were well-written stories, but there's
more to it.
My love of reading has a lot to do with the people who loved me
enough to read to me. Night after night either my mother or father would
snuggle up next to me and read from one of my favorite books. There were books
of poetry as well as stories. I requested some poems, like Rachel Field's
"General Store," so often that I began to recite them on my own. Then
there was
Betty MacDonald's Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle's Farm which I inscribed
with my name and this succinct review, "This is a very funny book."
How could it not be considering it had characters named Fetlock Harroway, Freda
Workbasket , and Crystal Mallett, not to mention a cow named Arbutus and a
horse named Trotsky (Hmm, a Cold War message here?).
Had Mrs. LeBel presented MacDonald's words as tools, or had she
asked us to strategize how to understand the story, I am sure that experience
would not have stayed with me these 60 years. Instead, we stopped whatever we
were doing, and she shared with us not only the story, but her time and her
love of reading. What a gift!
God bless fifth grade teachers who read aloud to their classes. My own fifth grade teacher, Miss Flagg, read many books to us, and I still remember details from at least three of them. There was a story about a boy becoming a squire; while I can't remember the title, it was probably Knight's Fee by Rosemary Sutcliff. Another book was Follow my Leader, about a boy who goes blind and must learn to adjust to his new life. I still remember him thinking about stacking his books in order so he could find them and then coming up short, realizing they were useless to him. She also read Blue Willow, this time with a strong female character, poverty-stricken Janey Larkin, who dreams of the better life represented by the house on her blue willow plate. What a gift it was indeed to travel to different times and places and connect with children so unlike, yet in some ways very much like, my friends and myself.
ReplyDeleteLinda O.