I've given a great number of books to my children.
PhotoJim Send a noteboard - 30/10/2009 11:57:13 AM
I like to provide both sides of an argument and talk it out in the middle with them. Thus I had my eldest read Stranger In A Strange Land (we are all our own messiah/commune/socialist living) and The Fountainhead (I am the only one that matters/screw anyone that is less than me) followed by Flowers for Algernon (our abilities do not dictate who we are/don't be a dick because you are smarter than other people). I looked at what lessons I thought he needed to learn at the time and guided his reading along those lines. He's 16 now and the last three books I've given him are The Tao of Pooh, The Picture of Dorian Gray, and Lamb: The Gospel According to Biff, Christ's Childhood Pal. I'll let you figure out the message from that group.
Getting the youngest to read has always been a struggle. He liked the Hobbit, but couldn't get through LOTR. He is very hit and miss with what he will read. Narnia was a no but some of the Xanth novels he blew through in a day. The Potter books were all read, but they were a struggle as well. But some of the Dragonlance books were done in a day. And he loved Maus I & II. I can never guess what he will like or won't. So I just don't have a good sense of what literary legacy I'm passing on to him. He is definitely his mother's son.
Getting the youngest to read has always been a struggle. He liked the Hobbit, but couldn't get through LOTR. He is very hit and miss with what he will read. Narnia was a no but some of the Xanth novels he blew through in a day. The Potter books were all read, but they were a struggle as well. But some of the Dragonlance books were done in a day. And he loved Maus I & II. I can never guess what he will like or won't. So I just don't have a good sense of what literary legacy I'm passing on to him. He is definitely his mother's son.
Everybody was Kung Fu fighting!
Not to be rude but who are you? And I suppose equally important, where are we?
The Wotmaniac formerly known as nomad.
Not to be rude but who are you? And I suppose equally important, where are we?
The Wotmaniac formerly known as nomad.
What books (other than SF-F) do you consider "vital" reading?
29/10/2009 12:02:04 PM
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My choices.
29/10/2009 01:20:07 PM
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Re: My choices.
30/10/2009 10:34:51 AM
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Heh.
06/11/2009 03:34:38 PM
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Re: they're going to get locked into a library full of books I will allow them to read.
29/10/2009 08:20:04 PM
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Dude. Don't censor your kids' books. *NM*
30/10/2009 02:19:22 PM
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Re: Dude. How will they learn to read under the covers if I don't? *NM*
30/10/2009 04:06:08 PM
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Wait, what? I only read under the covers when I was scared. *NM*
31/10/2009 05:46:13 AM
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Re: I read under the covers, by torchlight, with a decoy book so they'd not know what I was reading.
31/10/2009 09:30:18 AM
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Such a bizarre mental image to an American. *NM*
06/11/2009 01:41:14 AM
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I could not work out why it would be a bizarre image.
06/11/2009 03:27:26 PM
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Precisely. I was wondering how the sheets wouldn't burst into flames. *NM*
08/11/2009 06:54:49 AM
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I've given a great number of books to my children.
30/10/2009 11:57:13 AM
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I realise I forgot to include Beatrix Potter in my list. The shame. *NM*
06/11/2009 03:37:19 PM
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Re: What books (other than SF-F) do you consider "vital" reading?
08/11/2009 04:19:18 PM
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