I’ve
rediscovered my love of reading. Once
again, I feel like that little kid sitting on the floor of her pink bedroom. My long and sometimes ashy brown legs would
be stretched way out against the light green carpet. I was lost in a book.
I remember
this intensely pleasurable reading taking place during the summer of my
childhood. My mother, a school teacher,
would be home with us during the long summer months. As soon as we mentioned that we were bored, Ma
would say Bored? Ok. Go
get your things. We’re going to the
library. Her tone suggested that we
were in some sort of trouble. I loved to
read so I was always a little confused by this parental display. She piled her 3 kids into the back of the
green Chevy Nova and off we went.
The authors of my childhood were Beverly Cleary, Maya Angelou and Judy
Blume. Not too long after that I discovered
James Baldwin. I don’t remember my
mother scrutinizing my stack of books which is why I could slip in James
Baldwin at a fairly young age. At that
time children were really children. This
was before cable and the only source of corruption was the Brady Bunch, Threes
Company and Fat Albert. Even if my
mother saw me reading James Baldwin she probably thought I was trying to learn
about my black history.
Somewhere
along the way I lost my love of reading.
It probably started with all of the volumes of required reading for
college and graduate school. This was
followed by jobs that required more reading.
When I got home in the evenings, the last thing I wanted to do was deal
with more words. But I kept reading anyway. There were moments that I enjoyed but it felt
a lot like laundry. The main difference
is that I could remember a time when I loved reading and that memory buoyed me
along from book to book.
It made no
sense for me to approach a book like a kid trying to get through a plate full
of peas. So I stopped trying. I would
read what I wanted and when I wanted. I
would read an article here and a blog there. Sometimes I would read parts of books with no
goal of completion. This went on for a
few years.
Last May, I
was with my walking buddy Arlene and we decided to visit a new library we noticed
passed on our way to Arabia Mountain. We
casually walked around the library marveling at the architecture. Eventually we got to the books to check out
their selection. Suddenly I had this
urge to read which took me by surprise. I ended up choosing Jonah’s Gourd Vine by
Zorah Neale Hurston which was first published in 1934. I loved the wonderfully flawed main character
of preacher John Pearson. The dialect
was challenging and delightful.
I then
turned to my own bookshelf for the next selection, Giovanni’s Room by James
Baldwin. I savored every word. When I finished the last chapter, I declared once
again that Baldwin is the best. Now, I’m
reading Anne Lamott’s book – Bird by Bird: Some Instructions on Writing and
Life. She has some very practical
suggestions that I find quite helpful. I’m
amused by her use of lavish sarcasm.
I continue
to read as I can. I take my time. I lay
across my bed with only a night lamp on and sometimes I burn a candle. And the sensation is the same as it was a
long, long time ago.
Rediscovering Reading at the Stonecrest Library, Lithonia, GA |
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