WHEN THE READING LIGHT WENT ON
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There were always children’s books in our house. They were passed down and around. Christmas and birthdays were always an occasion to give books.
My mother was a stay-at-home mom. If I took a book to her, she made the time to sit and read it with me. When my sister, who was 4 years older han me, went to school, I would be home alone with mother. I remember sitting in the big purple chair in the living room reading nursery rhymes with her. I remember “Over in the Meadow” and “Hansel and Gretel.” I remember the great big anthologies. We had lots and lots of stories to read.
Even before I started school, I don’t remember wanting to be anything else other than a teacher. I knew from the time I was 4 years old. That was it. Books were always a part of that. They were my own special place. After I began school, I would come home after class, close myself in my bedroom with my record player and read books. I would read “The Hardy Boys” and biographies of famous people like George Washington and Harriet Beecher Stowe. It was always very relaxing.
Now books are my total relaxation. When I go home at the end of the day, I dump everything else out of my mind and pick up a book and read. I love mysteries, nonfiction, bestsellers. I read cereal boxes.
Here at school there’s a group of us who share books. When teachers finish one, they initial it and put it in someone else’s box. There’s a group of us who all like the same kind of stories.
I like to go into classrooms and sit down and read a book to the class. The more children see that adults enjoy reading, hopefully that’s going to rub off on them.
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