
The Weekly Wrap: June 14-20
Fathers, Read with Your Children
On Fathers Day, we honor fathers. But fathers may use the day to think about the kind of fathers they have been. We could go all sorts of places with that but on this page, I focus on the “reading place.”
I loved all sorts of things as a father–camping with Scouts, tossing a ball or shooting hoops in the driveway, geeking out together on computers.
I think for men to read with their children is one of the best way to foster children who read. Especially men reading with boys models to boys that reading is something men do.
But mostly, it was just a wonderful memory:
- Snuggling up on the sofa where we would read stories.
- Savoring a really good story together, like the first time we read Jane Yolen’s Owl Moon.
- As our son learned to read, listening to him read.
- Working our way through long adventures, like The Lord of the Rings
- Creating different voices for the various creatures in the Winnie The Pooh stories.
- Going to the bookstore or library and picking out books.
I’m convinced that children who have had enjoyable experiences reading with a parent often become readers.
And fathers, if you want bonus points, let your children see you reading for your own enjoyment and enrichment. It doesn’t need to be heavy reading, but if you are holding a book or magazine at least some of the time, rather than engaging in screen time, that will carry more credibility than limits on kids screen time.
A special Happy Fathers Day to all the reading dads out there!
Five Articles Worth Reading
Most bibliophiles include books in their vacation packing. But for some, bookish destinations are shaping their vacation plans. Read about it in “Call It a ‘Book-cation’ or a ‘Readaway,’ Literary Travel Is Having a Moment.”
Perhaps as part of reading up on our history as America approaches its 250th is to read up on our religious history. Jon Butler reviews Brook Wilensky-Lanford’s A God-Shaped Nation: Five Hundred Years of Religion in America in “Religion, American Style.” This might be a summer-long read, coming in at 672 pages!
Speaking of history, yesterday was Juneteenth, the holiday in which we celebrate the arrival of Union troops in Galveston, TX, announcing Emancipation on June 19, 1865. This is an old article, arguing “Juneteenth Should Be a National Holiday: Readings in Black History and Joy.” It now is, since 2021, but the collection of readings helps us understand the significance of the day for African-Americans and celebrate with them.
Marjane Satrapi, author of Persepolis and a fierce advocate for freedom died last week at 56. Hillary Chute chronicles her persevering pursuit of human rights in “The Defiance of Marjane Satrapi.”
Finally, as I was assembling this post, news of the U.S. 2-0 victory over Australia in the World Cup came across my feed. I’m not a big soccer (football in the rest of the world) fan even though I live in a city with an MLS team. But I’ve seen some of the changes, good and not so good, chronicled in “Can Soccer Be Normal in America?“.
Quote of the Week
I’ve long advocated that there is no freedom to not be offended and that people do not offend us. Rather, we choose to be offended (but there are other options). Salman Rushdie, born on June 19, 1947, expresses this well:
“What is freedom of expression? Without the freedom to offend, it ceases to exist.“
Miscellaneous Musings
I am among those who have grieved the lack of a genuinely non-partisan celebration of our nation’s 250th birthday. It was not strictly non-partisan, but I was heartened to see both political parties represented at the opening of the Obama Presidential Center. In the democratic values expressed and the joyous celebration, I wonder if it is the closest we will get to a 250th celebration that transcends our political divides.
One of the things I also love about the Obama Presidential Center is the inclusion of a new Chicago Public Library branch on the grounds, an expression of the couple’s longtime commitment to literacy, especially literacy efforts with children.
My Fathers Day weekend reading includes William Kent Krueger’s Desolation Mountain. Apropos, I love seeing how Cork O’Connor continues to grow as a father with his children as they become adults.
Next Week’s Reviews
Monday: Edward Donnelly, Heaven and Hell
Tuesday: Julie J. Park, Race, Class, and Affirmative Action
Wednesday: Amy Peeler, Ordinary Time
Thursday: Polly Giantonio, Remember the Sweetness
Friday: Terry Pratchett, Pyramids
So, that’s The Weekly Wrap for June 14-20.
Find past editions of The Weekly Wrap under The Weekly Wrap heading on this page.