These thoughts are tied to an
article in the June/July 2014 AARP magazine featuring a much published
author Joyce Carol Oates. It seems that
she has a favorite book that has inspired her writing career and changed her
life: Lewis Carroll's "Alice in Wonderland' and 'Through the Looking Glass". These two classics published in one volume
were received on her 9th birthday from her grandmother. She still has it and it
is just as treasured. I am paraphrasing
below what she says that she learned from "Alice”:
·
Be bold.
·
It is okay to question authority.
·
Look upon life as a possibility for adventures.
·
Be prepared to recognize fear, even terror,
without succumbing to it.
·
Don't panic or lose your common sense or
dignity.
Fairly profound thoughts from what has been accepted as a
children’s book. Yes, I do plan to read
both of these again with fresh eyes and perspective.
As a young girl she even began drawing stories using cats
and chickens as her characters vs adults using a lined tablet which kept her
captivated as a child for many hours. Children today should also be fed a diet of
books from an early age. Who can tell
how their future can be shaped as a result. Keep in mind that they will be
making the decisions for us as we age (directly or indirectly) and their
career, politics, personal and professional activities, friends, etc. will come into play through what they learn in
their choice of reading which will either compliment or complicate their life
plus yours and mine.
Just think. Her career was created/inspired/fed through
reading as a child thanks to her grandmother's thoughtful gift AND the works of
the gifted writer Lewis Carroll. That gift allowed her to become a gift to many
readers, myself included.
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