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I had the good fortune to grow up in a family that owned a summer house on a lake about two hours from our home.  Once school was out in June, we would all load up into the station wagon and head north.   There was something so blissful about turning off the highway and suddenly seeing familiar houses, roads, and even cemeteries.  The first one who spotted the lake through the trees would cry out in delight.  And a little while later we’d be heading down, down, down our very steep driveway to the oddly modern and uncottagelike building my parents had commissioned when I was an infant.

Our lake in New Hampshire. Wish I were there.

My mom and the kids stayed all summer; my father would leave early Monday morning, work all week back in Boston, then drive back Friday night for the weekends.  During the summer he really only slept well in the mountains, by the lake, where the air mostly stayed cool, so he took off whatever time he could and invited everyone he knew to come spend the day or the weekend with us there.  The house was always full, my mother planning, shopping for, and preparing meal after meal after meal for what could be dozens of guests on any given weekend.  I can’t imagine how much work it was for her: there wasn’t any take-out in that small town back in those days, and for decades there also wasn’t a dishwasher in the house, unless you counted the five kids.

There also wasn’t a TV in the house.  Years later, my father would give in and get a tiny TV set–mostly so he could watch tennis matches on it–but for the first decade or so, all we had was a radio that played kids’ programs on Sunday mornings.

Five kids, two and a half months, many rainy days . . . what was a mother to do?

Go to a library, of course.  Once a week we’d all pile into the car, drive to the town library and emerge with our arms filled with piles of books.  And for the next seven days, when we weren’t outside swimming or catching frogs or playing in our sandy driveway (just right for digging tunnels), we were draped over various pieces of furniture, reading. Read the rest of this entry »

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innova-logoAnother day, another award!  National Book Foundation (NBF) announced the first winners of the Innovation in Reading Prize yesterday.  The NBF awards the prize to individuals or institutions, or partnerships between the two, that have unique methods of encouraging or supporting life-long enjoyment of reading.  The jurors looked first for innovative methods, but where there were two equal candidates, the jurors then examined the need in the community that the candidate satisfied.  The winners receive up to $2,500.  Claire and I rooted for a bookstore to win.  Alas, our hopes were quashed by some truly terrific individuals and institutions:

James Patterson’s ReadKiddoRead.com – James Patterson’s son didn’t enjoy reading, so James spent summers looking for books that his son would enjoy.  Then, being who he is, he started writing books his son would enjoy.  Now he’s sharing all that he’s learned on a website ReadKiddoRead.com.  This is a terrific website, it has lists of great books that kids will love by age.  There are even lesson plans for teachers.  Okay, how many parents out there take solace from the fact that James Patterson’s son didn’t like to read?  While my kids love to read, there are other things that I love that they can’t stand; I look and them and wonder how they could be my child.

readergirlz - I LOVE THIS SITE!  Claire is going to die when I send it to her.  readergirlz is an online community for teen girls that pairs up a YA novel with a community service project each month.  This month the book is Red Glass by Laura Resau.  The book is about illegal immigration and the activity is awareness of Dream Act and possible participation May Day marches.  readergirlz interviews the author (and asks about her favorite bookstore, the most important question) and this month is holding an online chat with Laura Resau.  Read the rest of this entry »

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