The Weekly Wrap: March 8-14

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The Weekly Wrap: March 8-14

Becoming a Reader

As a toddler I often observed my mother reading. She was always quite attractive, and never more so than when she was reading. There was something magical about reading and I couldn’t wait to get in on the magic! So, when we began reading in the first grade, we learned to decode the sounds words made, and as we sounded out words and put them into simple sentences (See Dick Run), it was amazing. I was eager to learn more words and move from simple sentences to short stories.

It wasn’t long before regular trips to the library were a must. How wonderful to discover the children’s section and graduate from short stories to chapter books. Eventually, mom shared some of her books she thought suitable. Often, I read with a dictionary to understand words I hadn’t seen before. Some days, I just read interesting articles in our encyclopedia and if all else failed, the cereal box!

I know there are reasons this magic doesn’t happen for every child from family influences to temperament to learning disabilities that just make reading hard. But I hope it is a magic to which every child has access. In my case, role models, good teachers, access to books at home, and library trips were all part of it. Personally, I think a commitment to wanting every child to have access to the magic of reading is a mark of a great society.

Five Articles Worth Reading

It is often argued that religion has been the great enemy of the advance of science. In “Reformation of science,” Peter Harrison argues that Protestantism actually played a vital role in the emergence of the modern scientific enterprise.

Reason didn’t convince author Christopher Beha to go back to church. Falling in love did. In “What Atheism Could Not Explain,” Luis Parrales explores the stories of other atheists who turned to religious faith.

George Scialabba proposes that “perhaps the greatest repository of moral beauty in English literature, [is] the voice of the narrator in George Eliot’s Middlemarch.” He makes an argument for the beauty of a hidden life in “The Moral Beauty of Middlemarch.”

Ivan Keneally explores the moral contradictions of American life in “Mark Twain’s Absurd, Noble America.”

Finally, it seems that encouraging children to continue to read in the middle grades is a crucial link to forming a lifelong reading habit. In “Without Her, These Beloved Classics Might Never Have Been Published,” Mac Barnett profiles Ursula Nordstrom and her career of editing books for middle grade readers.

Quote of the Week

Part of what inspired my thoughts on the magic of reading was this quote from Alberto Manguel in The History of Reading:

“At one magical instant in your early childhood, the page of a book—that string of confused, alien ciphers—shivered into meaning. Words spoke to you, gave up their secrets; at that moment, whole universes opened. You became, irrevocably, a reader.”

Miscellaneous Musings

We had widespread power outages due to wind yesterday. Fortunately, we were not among them. I’m struck by how much we depend on electricity for so much of what we do including reading books at night. At one time, we would have been confined to reading by candlelight. But now at least, smartphone book apps and some e-readers are backlit–for as long as their charge holds out!

Kathleen Schmidt, in her Publisher’s Confidential Substack called out USA Today for adding books that were just announced to their bestseller list. Sarah J. Maas announced two new books to be published in late 2026 and early 2027 that were already on the list. I suspect this is based on pre-orders. The galling thing is that this is not indicated. I personally don’t tend to look at them but rather reviews. Sometimes, I’ll browse bestsellers in my bookstore, but they almost never are what interests me.

Plough Publishing has published a number of graphic art works on everything from a biography of Arvo Part to Anabaptist history. They just sent me a book that accompanies nature poetry with graphic art. For some reason, I find this enhances my reading versus just reading lines of text.

Next Week’s Reviews

Monday: Roger Lundin, The Culture of Interpretation

Tuesday: Fritz Leiber, Gather, Darkness!

Wednesday: Jeffrey Kluger, Gemini

Thursday: Michael S. Moore, Jazz Trash

Friday: W. Ross Hastings, The Glory of the Ascension

So, that’s The Weekly Wrap  for March 8-14.

Find past editions of The Weekly Wrap under The Weekly Wrap heading on this page.

Seriously? People Need Reasons to Read?

That was a response to my post yesterday, Reasons to Read.  Actually, I get that. I have to admit I’ve loved reading from when I first learned how to read. I probably owe this to parents who valued reading and education. My mom loved to read and I remember conversations over lunch about the books each of us were reading. She was a member of a couple of book clubs and new books would regularly arrive at our home. She enjoyed historical fiction and as I got older, I read some of this as well–books by Leon Uris come to mind. It was fun to explore the bookshelves at home, particularly as I discovered that they went two to three books deep at times. Sometimes I would just page through the encyclopedia set we had in the hall by my bedroom, fascinated that there was so much one could explore and learn.

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Main Library-Youngstown Ohio

The household budget only allowed for one of us to be buying books, so I grew up with regular trips to the library–first on Saturdays to our downtown library, and later on my own to our local branch library on the west side of Youngstown. It was a “rite of passage” of sorts to get my own library card! Sometimes the librarians would help, but mostly I was allowed to wander the shelves and discover interesting books–mostly I liked science and sports, but I also remember reading books about some of the battles of World War 2–interesting because my dad was in the army during that war. It was exciting as I got older to be able to take books out of the “adult” section of the library!

West Side Library--Youngstown Ohio

West Side Library–Youngstown Ohio

If there is a lesson from this trip down memory lane, it might be that if you want to be a reader, choose your parents well! I certainly did. I also suspect I had some personal propensities to this end. I wasn’t particularly athletic as a kid, and somewhat heavyset until I reached adolescence. It was probably the case that if I couldn’t be good at baseball, at least I could be good with books! I wonder how many readers are out there with similar experiences.

What I think about more and more though are the large numbers of people who rarely or ever crack open a book–whether in physical or e-book format. I guess one of the things I hope in writing about reading and the books I read is to not only preach to the choir but also to entice some for whom reading is an infrequent practice, other than on Facebook, that there are ways books can enrich our lives that are different from other enriching activities.

That happens in different ways for me. Books capture my imagination. The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings in my head is far richer and more vivid than the best of Peter Jackson, and gets richer with each re-reading. Books help me understand where I came from. The biography of John Quincy Adams I recently read helped me appreciate the role he played in the abolition of slavery–something I never knew before. Books challenge my thinking. The New Jim Crow forced me to ask some serious questions about the structures of our society and how they still undergird a racialized society.

What is different about books from our visual media? At best, what they do is engage our imagination and our intellect. They give us a chance to reflect and not simply absorb an endless set of images. They allow us to do that at our own pace and time. Something that captures our attention can be re-read, reflected upon, dialogued with. Books give us words to express what might be inchoate ideas or feelings.

What I would encourage for those who sense they might be missing something and want to read more is probably analogous to our experiences of learning about wines–of which we are still woefully ignorant. But we’ve been to some wine-tastings in our area, including one recently at a local vineyard where we could talk about the characteristics of different wines, and taste the differences for ourselves. “Taste” some different types of books, kind of like different wines and find those you enjoy.

As I’ve suggested before, GoodReads is a great resource to get ideas of interesting books from the recommendations of your friends or others (GoodReads will even give you their own recommendations based on books you have read or would like to read–most are pretty good). Or just visit your local library. Chances are, there is someone there who would be glad to help you find something interesting!

I’d love to hear stories of those who have become readers after growing up and how that happened for you!