My reading REALLY took off when my parents bought an encyclopedia (Colliers … we couldn’t afford Brittanica), and I began with the two volume dictionary. Wound up looking up words from the definitions. Took me three years to get to volume twenty. I was eight years old when that started.
Joe’s parents opposite of my mom, she was not into books at all. She grew up on farm land with one room school house and back then books was not in demand. Then when my mom around another mom who also did not want her kids to read, sealed it for my mom. I changed that for me when I got older. My own dad waited until he retired then only one type of book. My memories. I have read serious books, to non serious pleasure reading.
I had an English teacher in high school that made reading a novel a requirement of the course but she didn’t tell us which one. Instead, she gathered together 6 books and allowed us to read the first couple pages to pick one we would like to read. Then, once a week, we would break up into groups of those reading the same book and talk about the book. There wasn’t any book report to write. No grade was given. It was just to show us the joy of reading a book.
ugh, I HATE this, when people get all sarcastic and throw it in your face when you do something they wanted you to do. I often just stop doing it out of spite and make a big show of walking away from it in front of them.
I was quite the opposite as a kid. I was once very angry with my mother for drilling through a history book so that she could make a table lamp out of it.
I developed a love of reading at a very early age. I am told, though I don’t remember it, that I was sitting on my grandfather’s lap one day reading from a favorite book. Grandpa suspected me of memorizing the story, so he said "Jump around. " So I got off his lap and jumped around! He died when I was four, so I wasn’t very old.
It’s funny how some people were so against children reading the Harry Potter stories. And yet, the Bible starts off with people running around naked until they ate the forbidden fruit.
RohanDemon almost 4 years ago
These two could make him hate reading books AGAIN.
gsawyer101 almost 4 years ago
Once they are not required reading it can be fun.
Ellis97 almost 4 years ago
You can’t bury a book. They’re too valuable and full of information.
jagedlo almost 4 years ago
One of the few times where I would recommend an audiobook, so you can wear the earbuds and not have to listen to the outside conversation…
pathfinder almost 4 years ago
My reading REALLY took off when my parents bought an encyclopedia (Colliers … we couldn’t afford Brittanica), and I began with the two volume dictionary. Wound up looking up words from the definitions. Took me three years to get to volume twenty. I was eight years old when that started.
Ryker the reader almost 4 years ago
Burned one… in a park? That’s a story I want to hear from Joe
Snolep almost 4 years ago
That’s what he and Julio were doing down by the schoolyard.
kab2rb almost 4 years ago
Joe’s parents opposite of my mom, she was not into books at all. She grew up on farm land with one room school house and back then books was not in demand. Then when my mom around another mom who also did not want her kids to read, sealed it for my mom. I changed that for me when I got older. My own dad waited until he retired then only one type of book. My memories. I have read serious books, to non serious pleasure reading.
CitizenOfTheValley almost 4 years ago
I had an English teacher in high school that made reading a novel a requirement of the course but she didn’t tell us which one. Instead, she gathered together 6 books and allowed us to read the first couple pages to pick one we would like to read. Then, once a week, we would break up into groups of those reading the same book and talk about the book. There wasn’t any book report to write. No grade was given. It was just to show us the joy of reading a book.
yangeldf almost 4 years ago
ugh, I HATE this, when people get all sarcastic and throw it in your face when you do something they wanted you to do. I often just stop doing it out of spite and make a big show of walking away from it in front of them.
vanaals almost 4 years ago
I was quite the opposite as a kid. I was once very angry with my mother for drilling through a history book so that she could make a table lamp out of it.
spaced man spliff almost 4 years ago
His mom got him to read. Now he can teach his mom how to drive.
christelisbetty almost 4 years ago
The Dad was a cop, he should have booked him.
The Orange Mailman almost 4 years ago
You wanted some recognition for this, Joe.
joannesshadow almost 4 years ago
I developed a love of reading at a very early age. I am told, though I don’t remember it, that I was sitting on my grandfather’s lap one day reading from a favorite book. Grandpa suspected me of memorizing the story, so he said "Jump around. " So I got off his lap and jumped around! He died when I was four, so I wasn’t very old.
Dragoncat almost 4 years ago
It’s funny how some people were so against children reading the Harry Potter stories. And yet, the Bible starts off with people running around naked until they ate the forbidden fruit.
neatslob Premium Member almost 4 years ago
If you want kids to read, let them read what they want to read.