All posts tagged: The Reading Life

The Reading Life: The Acrobat

By JIM SHEPARD 

 

The Reading Life is a special 15th-anniversary essay series reflecting on close reading and re-reading, written by The Common’s Editorial Board.

I always thought that one of the quieter sadnesses of my father’s life—and there were plenty of noisy ones, even given that everyone, myself included, acknowledged that he was a delight to be around—was his relationship to his own education and to reading itself. Shep—everyone including his kids and his wife called him Shep—only got as far as high school before World War II intervened, and then worked at Sikorsky Aircraft, a company that built helicopters, after returning home. He’d flown ground attack missions in Burma as a dorsal turret gunner in a B-25 and resupply missions as a cargo officer in a C-47 through the Himalayas to China, and the latter missions, referred to as going ‘over the hump’ in flyboy speak, were so lethal that the aircraft and crews suffered a twenty percent loss rate. When he got home, he needed to decompress, what I now realize was his version of PTSD. His account of the seven or eight postwar months in which he just lay around worrying his mother—the details of which always seemed to me to eerily echo Hemingway’s great short story “Soldier’s Home”—always included as a sad self-indictment, “I thought I might read, but I never had the concentration for it.”  

The Reading Life: The Acrobat
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The Reading Life: You’re Going to Hear the Pages Turn

By WILLIE PERDOMO

The Reading Life is a special 15th-anniversary essay series reflecting on close reading and re-reading, written by The Common’s Editorial Board.
 

 

In the grade school days of Hooked on Phonics, I tested at a 6th grade level when I was in 3rd grade. But I didn’t really learn how to read until I was forty years old. 

As a young person, I cherished books for their escape value. They provided portals to places where I could forget the bullies on the block, my pre-teen insecurities around image and masculinity, and travel to fantastical underworlds, or follow bookish kids who saved a neighborhood from a villain’s corruptive grasp. My favorite time of the school year was the announcement of the Scholastic Book Fair. I couldn’t wait to get home and check off my selections on the order form. My mother limited my order to two books, sometimes three when she hit a number. I don’t remember what criteria I used, but a title with the word “adventure” was usually a selling point.

The Reading Life: You’re Going to Hear the Pages Turn
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The Reading Life: Re-Reading The Reader: Book Clubs, Reading Aloud, and the Many Faces of Aunt Betsy

By MARY JO SALTER

 

The Reading Life is a special 15th-anniversary essay series reflecting on close reading and re-reading, written by The Common’s Editorial Board.

 

Whenever I’ve been asked to join a book club, I’ve given a stock answer: No thanks, my life is already a book club. As an English professor who had led class discussions about books for decades, I had acquired an arrogant persona: I was someone who told other people what to read, not the other way around. Yes, I was grateful for book recommendations by certain discerning friends. But any sort of public gathering in which everyone got a democratic turn to assign the others a book, however far it ranged from one’s own interests, and then most members had to pretend to enjoy the book more than they had, was my definition of a lousy party.

The Reading Life: Re-Reading The Reader: Book Clubs, Reading Aloud, and the Many Faces of Aunt Betsy
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The Reading Life: Reconsidering My Weirdo Hero

By TED CONOVER

 

The Reading Life is a special 15th-anniversary essay series reflecting on close reading and re-reading, written by The Common’s Editorial Board.

 

In seventh grade English class, I read a poem in an anthology that felt custom-written for me. “It’s Raining in Love” captured almost perfectly an anxiety that I, at 13 years, felt practically every day: how to talk to a girl. The first lines are all about the speaker, worrying about the right things to say, but then it shifts to the girl’s perspective and finally this ending:

The Reading Life: Reconsidering My Weirdo Hero
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