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Autobiography
of a Reader
This is an invitation to talk, on paper, about what reading meant
to you while you were growing up. It's an opportunity for you to
recall, and record, the experiences that shaped your concept of
what reading is, and the experiences that determined your attitude
toward books and other forms of written language.
If
you're a tireless, voracious reader, never stopping till you turn
the last page of a book, you'll no doubt wish to focus on how your
love of reading was born, and how it was nurtured. You'll write
a different story, of course, if reading is not one of the joys
of your life, and if you read only when a teacher tells you to.
Whatever
kind of reader you are, I hope the questions asked here will take
you into some self-involving writing. For writing this autobiography--and
then listening attentively as you read it--could help you become
a more perceptive and thoughtful reader.
Like
most folks who write autobiography, you may wish to begin with your
earliest memories--of the written language in this instance. For
example:
The word games you learned to play, and the reading lessons you
saw and heard, while watching Sesame Street or another
TV program.
The brand names you learned to recognize--first on TV commercials,
and then on the shelves of the supermarket.
The first
word games you played with your family, at home or on long trips.
The sound
and rhythm of a loving voice reading your favorite story, singsonging
the nursery rhymes you loved, repeating the familiar words, talking
about the familiar pictures. That voice may be your first memory
of books. Listening to it, night after night, may be the first
ritual you remember. If so, tell your reader about that significant
reading experience.
The first
book you read all by yourself. or the first verse you memorized.
If you remember, or if your parents have told you about it, talk
about this happy experience.
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