When I think back to the most impressionable books from my childhood. These come to mind. It begins with Richard Scarry's Best Word Book Ever. When my own children came of age for this book, they equally loved the book. In early grade school it was Little Bear. I was so please with myself for reading these hard cover books. That may be why I only enjoy reading hard cover books and I exhaust all avenues to get a book in hardback before I even think about a soft cover book. I moved into late elementary and junior high have difficulties with literature. I loved to read but it was books like A House with a Clock in its Wall and and Flowers In the Attic. These were nontraditional types of book, but it was this genre that I excelled with (which consequently was not the advocated genre in school). I moved into horror books and ended high school loving science fiction. When I reach senior English and was assigned Brave New World, a whole new identity opened up for me at school. I new this genre and excelled in the discussions. I struggled up until then to succeed in language arts classes. When I look back, it was not that I could not read or comprehend. I just always had a different perspective on the pieces and those perspectives were not the desired responses. I credit my senior English teacher for helping my find my identity as an academic.
Sunday, September 28, 2008
The Lasting Impressions of Childhood
When I think back to the most impressionable books from my childhood. These come to mind. It begins with Richard Scarry's Best Word Book Ever. When my own children came of age for this book, they equally loved the book. In early grade school it was Little Bear. I was so please with myself for reading these hard cover books. That may be why I only enjoy reading hard cover books and I exhaust all avenues to get a book in hardback before I even think about a soft cover book. I moved into late elementary and junior high have difficulties with literature. I loved to read but it was books like A House with a Clock in its Wall and and Flowers In the Attic. These were nontraditional types of book, but it was this genre that I excelled with (which consequently was not the advocated genre in school). I moved into horror books and ended high school loving science fiction. When I reach senior English and was assigned Brave New World, a whole new identity opened up for me at school. I new this genre and excelled in the discussions. I struggled up until then to succeed in language arts classes. When I look back, it was not that I could not read or comprehend. I just always had a different perspective on the pieces and those perspectives were not the desired responses. I credit my senior English teacher for helping my find my identity as an academic.
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1 comment:
Your collage is very good and the text description helps contextualize the images for me--and also brings back my own memories of books that made a strong and lasting impression. The only change I suggest would be to experiment with the size and font of your text to make it stand out a little more against the multicolored background. And also, perhaps add an "s" to the word "book."
Otherwise, good job.
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