Please welcome Tami Lewis Brown to GreenBeanTeenQueen!
Tami is the author of the middle grade novel, The Map of Me.
Tami has a great post about libraries that warms my heart! I hope you love it too!
Why I Read Dangerouslyāor How the Sidney Eline Library Saved My Life
The motto on my website says READ DANGEROUSLY. Itās a directive I take seriouslyāboth as a reader and a writer. Read with open eyes and an open mind. Seek out new writers, new genres, new ideas. Read to foster life long learning. For me reading dangerously isnāt about reading books with ābad languageā or drugs or promiscuous behavior. Itās REAL danger. Itās reading books that make you think.
But I wasnāt always an adventurous reader. In fact, the odds were against me being any kind of reader at all. Decoding came hard. By second grade I was barely keeping pace with Dick and Jane and the Sparrows reading group while the Bluebirds and Cardinals soared into chapter books.
No one in my family was an enthusiastic reader and we didnāt have lots of books at home. I remember one battered volume of Childcraft nursery rhymes in our houseānot exactly dangerous reading.
What we did have, just a few miles away, was the childrenās department of the Sidney Eline Public Library. And their impressive display of novels with shiny gold and silver stickers on the front. I wasnāt exactly sure what those stickers meant except that it was something good. And these books, even the picture books, werenāt for babies. No āSee Spot runā in the shiny sticker books.
Look out Cardinal reading group! I was hooked. Then and there I decided I was a reader and believing in a thing is more than half of making it happen.
Soon I read about a silver makerās apprentice, a wild Wisconsin tomboy, and my favorite, a brother and sister who run away to a museum in a city that fueled all my dreams. I didnāt love them all. Sailing around the Pacific on a little handmade boat? Boring. And so I learned to rely on my own taste and judgment, valuing my own opinions and back them up with reasons.
Maybe these books, classics now, donāt seem ādangerousā but they showed me there are other ways of thinking and living. I may have been only eight or nine but the books in the Eline Library Childrenās Department introduced me to the life of the mind. They made me a person who asks questions and doesnāt expect easy answers. A person whoās willing to wait and savor to reach the end. A person who knows the obvious solution isnāt necessarily the right one.
So why do I write for children? If my books lure just one child into one library, opening their eyes to the possibilities, I will have accomplished more than any āadultā writer who crafts pretty phrases or twisted plots. I will have passed the love of books to the next generation. What could be more deliciously dangerous?
Tami is the author of the middle grade novel, The Map of Me.
Tami has a great post about libraries that warms my heart! I hope you love it too!
Why I Read Dangerouslyāor How the Sidney Eline Library Saved My Life
The motto on my website says READ DANGEROUSLY. Itās a directive I take seriouslyāboth as a reader and a writer. Read with open eyes and an open mind. Seek out new writers, new genres, new ideas. Read to foster life long learning. For me reading dangerously isnāt about reading books with ābad languageā or drugs or promiscuous behavior. Itās REAL danger. Itās reading books that make you think.
But I wasnāt always an adventurous reader. In fact, the odds were against me being any kind of reader at all. Decoding came hard. By second grade I was barely keeping pace with Dick and Jane and the Sparrows reading group while the Bluebirds and Cardinals soared into chapter books.
No one in my family was an enthusiastic reader and we didnāt have lots of books at home. I remember one battered volume of Childcraft nursery rhymes in our houseānot exactly dangerous reading.
What we did have, just a few miles away, was the childrenās department of the Sidney Eline Public Library. And their impressive display of novels with shiny gold and silver stickers on the front. I wasnāt exactly sure what those stickers meant except that it was something good. And these books, even the picture books, werenāt for babies. No āSee Spot runā in the shiny sticker books.
Look out Cardinal reading group! I was hooked. Then and there I decided I was a reader and believing in a thing is more than half of making it happen.
Soon I read about a silver makerās apprentice, a wild Wisconsin tomboy, and my favorite, a brother and sister who run away to a museum in a city that fueled all my dreams. I didnāt love them all. Sailing around the Pacific on a little handmade boat? Boring. And so I learned to rely on my own taste and judgment, valuing my own opinions and back them up with reasons.
Maybe these books, classics now, donāt seem ādangerousā but they showed me there are other ways of thinking and living. I may have been only eight or nine but the books in the Eline Library Childrenās Department introduced me to the life of the mind. They made me a person who asks questions and doesnāt expect easy answers. A person whoās willing to wait and savor to reach the end. A person who knows the obvious solution isnāt necessarily the right one.
So why do I write for children? If my books lure just one child into one library, opening their eyes to the possibilities, I will have accomplished more than any āadultā writer who crafts pretty phrases or twisted plots. I will have passed the love of books to the next generation. What could be more deliciously dangerous?
Great post, thanks!
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