Books and Magic

‘What an astonishing thing a book is.  It’s a flat object made from a tree with flexible parts on which are imprinted lots of funny dark squiggles. But one glance at it and you’re inside the mind of another person, maybe somebody dead for thousands of years. Across the millennia, an author is speaking clearly and silently inside your head, directly to you. Writing is perhaps the greatest of human inventions, binding together people who never knew each other, citizens of distant epochs. Books break the shackles of time. A book is proof that humans are capable of working magic.”

– Carl Sagan – Cosmos, Part II: The Persistence of Memory, 1980

Thank you to beth,I didn’t have my glasses on…. for sharing this remarkable quote.  Actually, remarkable is an understatement.

I think about my childhood, and how I never had the experience Carl Sagan talks about.  Never.  There was no ‘getting lost’ in a book.  I only remember one time being in a library.  My mother was a voracious reader, but she didn’t read to her children.  My grandmother had a book I loved, The Five Chinese Brothers, in a drawer, and I looked at it when I visited.  My first grade teacher read aloud The Little House, by Virginia Lee Burton.  I remember it to this day.  After that, there was no reading aloud at school.  So sad.  By high school, the only teacher who tried to read aloud a book to the class – Moby Dick – was a disaster.  My interest in reading books stopped at this point.

The two books I read in high school on my own, after the movie, were Gone With the Wind and To Kill a Mockingbird.  That was the closest I came to Carl Sagan, and it was wonderful.

College had no books that triggered a reading interest.  Sad.

The ‘lightbulb moment’ happened when we moved to Massachusetts with our two young children.  I took them to the library.  Hooray!  Our daughter spotted Jumanji, by Chris Van Allsburg and was excited, because her teacher had read aloud the book.  I asked our son what book his teacher had read, and he was excited to tell me about The Runaway Bunny, by Margaret Wise Brown.

That was the start of my reading, and reading aloud.  It has grown in leaps and bounds, in many ways.  Thank goodness.  Thank you, Carl Sagan.  Yes, books are magic!

Jennie

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About Jennie

I have been teaching preschool for over forty years. This is my passion. I believe that children have a voice, and that is the catalyst to enhance or even change the learning experience. Emergent curriculum opens young minds. It's the little things that happen in the classroom that are most important and exciting. That's what I write about. I was a live guest on the Kelly Clarkson Show. I am highlighted in the seventh edition of Jim Trelease's million-copy bestselling book, "The Read-Aloud Handbook" because of my reading to children. My class has designed quilts that hang as permanent displays at the National Liberty Museum in Philadelphia, the Fisher House at the Boston VA Hospital, and the Massachusetts State House in Boston.
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45 Responses to Books and Magic

  1. When we find the right book, and make that connection with wonder, it truly is magical.

  2. Reading and books can magically allow us to escape.

  3. Dan Antion's avatar Dan Antion says:

    Thank god my mother thought we should read and regularly took us to the Book Mobile. I remember checking out Horton Hears a Who. I don’t remember how many times I “read” it after my mother read it to me, but it was one of the first books I bought to read to our daughter.

    Other than the various exploits of Dick and Jane, I don’t remember reading in school until junior high when book reports were being assigned. What a way to ruin an interest in reading.

    • Jennie's avatar Jennie says:

      Thank you for telling me all this, Dan. Lucky you! Horton Hears a Who must be near and dear to both you and Faith.

      Oh, Dick and Jane… I almost mentioned this reader in my blog post. Back in the 50’s there was another choice for a reader that states could adopt – Dr. Seuss. Few states jumped on board (Vermont did), and what a shame, because all that rhyming and repetition was just the ticket to learn how to read. If I had learned with Dr. Seuss instead of Dick and Jane, I would have been a much better reader.

      Yes, book reports can ruin an interest in reading!

      • Dan Antion's avatar Dan Antion says:

        It’s funny, Jennie. We read so many books to Faith, that she (we assumed) memorized them. One day, I brought home a new book, and she asked if she could read it to me. I told her it was new and that she had never heard the story. She asked for the book, and started reading it to me. My wife and I were shocked. We guessed that she was recognizing the words, but she was getting the inflection and punctuation correct. I think she was 3 or 4 at the time. Way before Kindergarten.

      • Jennie's avatar Jennie says:

        I love, LOVE that story! That’s what happens when children have been read to, and when they have books. Jim Trelease wrote about this with proof and incredible stories. You get the gold star award, Dan.

  4. Victoria's avatar Victoria says:

    I’d say you and Beth both are pretty darn magical, Jennie. I’m with you – the quote from Sagan is a winner, winner! Sunday morning hugs to you! ❤️😊❤️

  5. mitchteemley's avatar mitchteemley says:

    They are indeed, Jennie. Happy New Year!

  6. Loved the quote by Sagen and so true. Like you, books came later. Reading aloud was only done once and it triggered something. Mom didn’t have time. When I found a library on our base in Georgia, I walked there and read as much as possible. I couldn’t bring books home. My Oma taught me to read in German and I was hooked. (Mom never knew). My 4 bookcases are full of an eclectic collection. If there is no room for my books, I can’t live there. 🙂 I’m pretty sure I will let go of the fabric well before the books. You, reading aloud will strike the cord in each child to want more. We definitely need to clone you many times over. Beth too.

    • Jennie's avatar Jennie says:

      Thanks for your wonderful comment, and very kind words, Marlene. I’m glad I’m not alone being late in reading. You were lucky that your Oma taught you to read. When you say you would give away fabrics before you give away books… wow! That says it all.

  7. Darlene's avatar Darlene says:

    I love that Carl Sagan quote as it is so true. I was lucky. My parents were poor farmers with limited education, but they read to us and encouraged reading. My teachers read to us as well. Being read to is one of my fondest memories of growing up. Once I started reading, a whole world opened up to me. I was never bored when I had a book on the go. People have often said to me, “Why do you know so much?” I answer, “Because I read.”

    • Jennie's avatar Jennie says:

      What a wonderful story of your childhood, Darlene. Big smiles, here. And I love the question people asked you, and of course your answer. 😀

      • Darlene's avatar Darlene says:

        I just took it for granted that everyone had been read to as a child. I just sent a thank you to me parents and teachers in heaven. ❤️❤️

  8. Karma's avatar Karma says:

    It seems so strange to me to think of childhood without independent reading. My childhood was filled with Dr Seuss, then Nancy Drew when I was a little older, given to me and encouraged by my mother. Reading and library time was emphasized in school, and we were always taken to the town library as children so that we always had books to read. I continued this with my own children, reading to them as babies, and continuing when the Harry Potter books came out when they were older. That quote by Sagan is awesome. And how great that you turned your life’s work into reading to children.

    • Jennie's avatar Jennie says:

      You were lucky, Karma. I love your childhood story. I guess I can say that I was lucky to find that reading path, and make a difference with children. Yes, Sagan’s quote is so awesome!

  9. Don Ostertag's avatar Don Ostertag says:

    I read and read. Sometimes my mother would tell me to stop reading and go out in the fresh air, and I would sneak a book under my shirt and go in the barn and read.

  10. As they say better late than never. Thanks for sharing your story, Jennie. 😊

  11. willedare's avatar willedare says:

    I am gently astounded to learn that you — who are so passionate and diligent about reading aloud to others, was not read aloud to as a child. Hurrah that you discovered the power and importance of reading aloud with your own children — and now you (as a teacher) have passed this wisdom/habit/practice on to thousands of children and their families!!!

    • Jennie's avatar Jennie says:

      I know! People are always shocked to learn I was not a good reader, and was not read to as a child. It’s amazing what one can do when inspired, and the library with my children inspired me. From that point on, everything grew with reading aloud. I am humbled to think how many young children I’ve introduced to the love of books and reading. Thank you for your wonderful comment and kind words, Will!

  12. johnrieber's avatar johnrieber says:

    Fascinating story! We all discover books in our own way – or sadly, never do….but I did at an early age and never let go of that passion…magic on every page…so happy that my two grandkids are voracious readers as well!

    • Jennie's avatar Jennie says:

      I’m so glad your grandchildren are voracious readers! And, you discovered books and reading as a child, too. Wonderful! Yes, we all discover books in our own way, or at different times. As the saying goes, ‘better late than never.’ There is definitely magic on every page. Thanks for reading and commenting, John.

  13. Love that backstory. How many of us are like that, Jennie.

  14. My feelings exactly, about the decline in reading and the lack of interesting reading at the university level.

    • Jennie's avatar Jennie says:

      Exactly! The former head of the English Department at the prep school (high school) in our town talked with me about reading to her high school senior class. She was appalled that the students were not well read, so she read aloud to them every day. In her words to her students before reading, ‘lights out, heads down.’ That’s the same thing I do with my preschoolers before chapter reading. We both smiled!

  15. Annika Perry's avatar Annika Perry says:

    Jennie, your love of reading and sharing the magic seems such an innate part of who you are that I am astonished that this wasn’t fostered and developed at a young age. How wonderful that through your daughters the wonder of books came to you and yes, Carl Sagan write so beautifully about the magic of books and I love losing myself in them!

    • Jennie's avatar Jennie says:

      Everyone is shocked to learn that I was not a reader and was not read to as a child. It is inspiring to know that anything can happen and things can change. Carl Sagan is one of the best, and his writing about the magic of books blew me away!

  16. I had no idea that you didn’t grow up with a love of books from an early age!

    • Jennie's avatar Jennie says:

      I know, it’s a shocker. I know for sure if I had grown up with Dr. Seuss as a learn to read in school, instead of Dick and Jane, I would have been a better reader and embraced books, in spite of my lack of being read to. Unfortunately on a few states adopted Dr. Seuss instead of Dick and Jane. Vermont did!! All that rhyme and repetition is what children need. Still, I found a way, and it is what I do best.

  17. Jim Borden's avatar Jim Borden says:

    I had never read that wonderful Carl Sagan quote until I saw Beth’s post as well.

    I would have never guessed that you had such a late start with reading, given how it is such an integral part of everything you do now.

    I was lucky, I grow up reading the Hardy Boys books. The first “big” book I can remember reading simply for enjoyment was The Caine Mutiny, probably in my mid to late teens.

    My wife is a voracious reader, and she has passed this love of reading down to our three boys…

  18. beetleypete's avatar beetleypete says:

    That’s a great quote from Mr Sagan, and always good to see again. The story of your early years of reading came as a surprise, as I had always thought you were an avid bookworm from a very early age. You have more than made up for it since! 😊

    Best wishes, Pete.

  19. bruce@ssa's avatar bruce@ssa says:

    I liked that quote on Beth’s site as well, Jennie. Books really are magical if you think about it. It’s just sitting there…you pick it up…and away you go. It’s like having a time machine just laying about, and you step into another dimension or universe at your leisure. I too was a little surprised to hear about your early years not featuring books. Mine did, and while I don’t read nearly as much as I used to, I still love the internal and external feel of a physical book in my hands…and in my head!

  20. Yes, books are magic, and I was lucky enough to have parents who loved books and libraries!

  21. petespringer's avatar petespringer says:

    In my 67th year, I read more books than at any other point in my life. They’re still magical, allowing our imaginations to run wild.

  22. beth's avatar beth says:

    oh, Jennie, what a reading journey you have taken. from practically nothing to a dedicated reader and writer with children and follower of authors and everything to do with books. books really do work their magic on us. I’m going to recommend a novel to you that you may have read that deals with this by author pat conroy, who wrote the prince of tides and the great santini, among other amazing books. this books is called, ‘my reading life’ and is his memoir. he said it saved his life. he had a very difficult childhood as you’ll gather from reading his other books, (the great santini was about this father), and they were his refuge and guided him into his life’s work.

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