Saturday, August 6, 2016

Saturday Stories - About Reading 08-06-16

Diane doesn’t remember learning to read.  The family story is that one day she just started reading out loud the words on the cereal box.  She was too young to read!  At age four she and her sister went to a Catholic school where they let her read beyond her age with the supervision of one of the nuns.  Strangely, her older sister took years to learn. 
The first books she remembers belonged to a lady who lived next door to her grandmother.  Her name was Mona Napier and she had a grown daughter who had left all her books at Mona’s house.  There were all the Wizard of Oz books, ”The Secret Garden”, “Little Women”, “Girl of the Limberlost”, “Ann of Green Gables” and so many more.  Mona was always willing to help with new words and there was a huge dictionary in her living room – on its own stand!  That room was heaven for Diane and she read all the books she could get her hands on. 
When the sisters moved back to Oregon after the war, Diane discovered the local Carnegie Library and started reading with “A” in the children’s section.  She didn’t get very far alphabetically because some of the books were deadly dull.  So she started reading randomly, keeping a record of what she read.  Would that she still had those lists today. 
In the fourth grade she wanted to read Pearl Buck’s ”The Good Earth”, but the librarian said it was an adult book and wouldn’t let her check it out.  She told her mother, who wrote a letter to the librarian saying Diane could read whatever she wished.  The librarian was pushed out of shape, but allowed Diane to check out anything in the library.  Reading “The Good Earth” periodically over the years has shown Diane new insights and she soon understood why the librarian thought it was too advanced for her.
It would be impossible to pick one favorite book out of the millions available.  But there are favorite authors: Ivan Doig, Malcolm Gladwell, Elizabeth Peters, P.D. James, Jane Austen, Rudyard Kipling,  Charles Dickens, and on and on!  At a recent meeting someone had a copy of “Paddle to the Sea” by Holling C. Holling (who also wrote “Tree in the Trail” and “Minn of Mississippi”) and Diane remembered how thrilled she was when she read it decades ago.  Good books stay with you over the years. 
Reading has given Diane a wandering foot; she always wants to visit the places she has read about and has traveled all her adult life.  But there are so many places yet to go.  And many books yet to read.

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2 comments:

Carol said...

Wonderful recollections! Hooray for Mona Napier and her dictionary on a stand.

Loretta said...

Lucky, lucky Diane to have been able to read so many books. I was never able to read books....I think it was because my parents didn't read...I was told later in my life, by my mother, that my father wasn't able to read! Hard to believe, but perhaps that's why we didn't have any books in the house and because the library was not one of the places my family or I ever visited. For the past many years, I've been trying to catch up!