I’m a lifelong reader, beginning with the Dick and Jane books in first grade, and being inspired by my mother’s avid reading habits. One of my earliest memories is of her reading a sci-fi thriller with a giant spider on the cover. As a grade schooler I read books about World War II and astronomy, and avidly devoured fiction like Silver Chief, Dog of the North, Call of the Wild, White Fang, King of the Wind (the first book I bought, at a school book sale), and Misty of Chincoteague.
Reading got me into trouble at school. In fifth grade I attended a brand-new elementary school that had modular classrooms with sliding walls. One day I snuck out of the back of my math class to go to the school library to, yes, read. Of course, I was found out.
I used to tell that story to students at the libraries I worked at, finishing with, “and look where I ended up.” It always got a laugh, especially from kids who loved to read. But of course, study math, too. I did, especially after my math teacher suggested to my parents to have my eyes tested. I learned I was myopic (which was why I struggled with math from the back of the class room).
The reading continued. My mother loaned me her set of Edgar Rice Burroughs Barsoom novels one summer, and during my sophomore year in high school I devoured thrillers like The Crash of ’79 and Black Sunday.
When I met my future wife at a job we both had while in high school, one of the many things that drew me to her was that she loved to read.
Reading is not only fundamental, it’s foundational to who I am, and, I strongly suspect, to most if not all of you.
With that in mind, today’s Words of Wisdom looks at reading. Clare Langley-Hawthorne shares the magic Sherlock Holmes worked on her as a young reader. Debbie Burke discusses the legendary Nancy Drew’s impact on her and many others. Finally, Sue Coletta discusses some of the important benefits of reading. You can read the full versions of each of the excerpts, linked from their respective original posting dates.
Luckily, both my boys are great readers (so we get to take lots of books with us!) and I love how we can now discuss books we’ve all read and how I can give them recommendations now that don’t (usually) provoke a whole lot of eye-rolling. I also still read to them every night and have recently started introducing them to Conan Doyle’s Sherlock Holmes stories.
A few pages into the Hound of the Baskervilles, however, and my boys were already terrified (not a good idea just before bed!) so we started instead with A Study in Scarlet and have just recently moved on to The Sign of Four. What is amazing to me is how, despite the old-fashioned language and pace, both my boys are already totally hooked – and I think it’s not really the mystery that draws them in but the character of Holmes himself. It really is amazing to think that a character which in many ways is such a product of his times can be still so intriguing over a hundred years later. As a mum of course, I do have to explain his drug use and the smoking…but, hey, I think of these as…er…’teachable’ moments!
I came to Sherlock Holmes quite late (I was well into my twenties before I read my first Holmes’ story) – compared to my husband who devoured all the stories when he was in the 5th and 6th grade at school in Australia. Though I enjoyed the stories, I don’t think I appreciated the mesmerising qualities of Sherlock Holmes as a character until I started reading the stories aloud to my boys. I’ve been interrogated by them on every aspect of his character – from whether he was based on a real person, to why he knows so much, to how, on earth, he can make such amazing deductions…He’s like a super-hero in many ways but also an enigmatic and flawed hero – which is what, I suspect, makes him so intriguing.
I’m looking forward to continuing to read these stories to my boys and then, I hope, handing the books over to them to read for themselves. To me, one of the great pleasures of being a parent, is passing on a love of reading. I already see each of my twins developing their own reading preferences and am glad that, at least in so far as Sherlock Holmes is concerned, they are gaining an appreciation for mysteries:)
So – tell me, are you are Sherlock Holmes fan?
Clare Langley-Hawthorne—March 31, 2014
Nancy Drew was the original Super Girl—independent, confident, smart. She was competent to handle any challenge, fearless in the face of danger, and resourceful at solving problems decades before MacGyver came along. She drove motorboats, rode horses, and played tennis better than her boyfriend, Ned Nickerson. The girl sleuth never backed down from threats and brought villains to justice.
She is credited as an early influence on many girls who grew up to be accomplished, notable women, including Sandra Day O’Connor, Oprah Winfrey, Ruth Bader Ginsberg, Sonia Sotomayor, Hillary Rodham Clinton, and Laura Bush.
Credit: www.nancydrewsleuth.com
Nancy’s heroic adventures kept my friends and me up long past bedtime, reading with flashlights under the covers. I remember saving for weeks to buy the latest release when it hit the neighborhood toy store that carried her books. If I recall correctly, the hardbacks in the late 1950s cost around a dollar, a serious investment for a kid earning a dime a week allowance.
Credit: www.nancydrewsleuth.com
Additionally, I devoured the local library’s collection of Nancy’s earlier books published in the 1930s and ’40s, with dark blue boards and cool pen-and-ink illustrations.
The dust jackets on older editions had long since disappeared and, after thousands of check-outs, bindings were often held together by heavy tape.
I didn’t really know what a “roadster” was but I sure wanted a blue roadster convertible just like Nancy’s.
Credit: www.nancydrewsleuth.com
In the 1950s, the books featured lighter blue, tweed-pattern boards with dust jackets.
Credit: www.nancydrewsleuth.com
By the 1960s, the dust jackets disappeared and the spine became bright yellow with illustrations incorporated into the front hardcover.
The last one I remember reading was The Secret of the Golden Pavilion (1959) which took place in the then-exotic locale of Hawaii around the time it became the 50thstate.
Throughout the 30 or so books I read, Nancy remained eternally 18-years-old (16 in earlier versions) but never attended school or college. Her successful attorney father, Carson Drew, encouraged her to pursue all kinds of dangerous adventures but no one ever got murdered.
Nancy’s only job was solving mysteries and she didn’t get paid for her efforts.
Realistic? Not very.
Fun and exciting? Yes!
Nancy solved her first mystery in 1930 (The Secret of the Old Clock) and kept unraveling puzzles in 56 classic hardcovers originally published by Grosset & Dunlap. Simon & Schuster added eight additional books in paperback. A complete set of 64 classics in hardcover sells for over $400. The classic series ended in 2003 with 175 books. Spinoffs continue to the present day, totaling more than 600 books, TV series, video games, and films.
Debbie Burke—April 26, 2019
Reading reduces stress.
A 2009 study by Sussex University showed reading may reduce stress by as much as 68 percent.
“It really doesn’t matter what book you read, by losing yourself in a thoroughly engrossing book you can escape from the worries and stresses of the everyday world and spend a while exploring the domain of the author’s imagination,” cognitive neuropsychologist David Lewis told The Telegraph.
Reading helps us relax.
There’s a reason snuggling up with a good book sounds so appealing. Because it is! Reading washes away the stressors of the day as we melt into the pages of a good book.
Reading fiction for fun.
Readers of fiction have increased creativity, empathy, and emotional intelligence. Losing ourselves in a fictional character’s experiences make us more open-minded and allow us to spend time in someone else’s shoes. Thus, readers become better humans than non-readers.
Reading supports self-improvement.
Readers support lifelong learning. One of the best ways to do that is to pick up a book and learn something new. Waving at readers who prefer nonfiction!
In general, read is good for our wellbeing.
Some of us read to escape reality or imagine worlds beyond our own. Some read to learn new skills—cooking, crafting, creativity—or about real people who intrigue or inspire us. Some read thought-provoking books, some dive into futuristic worlds beyond our imagination. Whatever the reason that brings us to the page, reading is one of the best forms of self-care.
Is reading contagious?
Absolutely! Rather than rattle off statistics, I’ll pose a question. How many books have you bought based on word of mouth? When we see another reader all excited about a new book, we want to feel that way, too. So, what do we do? We check out the book.
When children see their parents reading for fun, it plants the seed for them to become lifelong readers, as well. In adults, if one partner pleasure reads several times per week, it lights a spark in their significant other. My husband never read for pleasure till he married me. When he first took the plunge, he devoured more books per week than I did. Over the years as he built and ran his small engine business, he had less time to read. But he dives between the folds whenever possible. Why? Because he sees how much I enjoy reading, and it’s contagious.
Sue Coletta—August 8, 2022
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- How has reading shaped you?
- What was the first book you read that changed you?
- Did you read Sherlock Holmes and/or Nancy Drew as a child?
- What are some of the benefits of you get from reading?
How has reading shaped you?
I’m less ignorant and can discuss literature and stuff.
What was the first book you read that changed you?
This is a tough question. It might have been de Camp’s “Science Fiction Handbook,” or Heinlein’s “Space Cadet,” or “Flatland,” by Edwin Abbott Abbott. Or it could have been “The World of Null-A,” by A. E. vanVogt. Or something by C. S. Lewis. If it changed my Unconscious mind, I might not know.
Did you read Sherlock Holmes and/or Nancy Drew as a child?
I read one of my sister’s Nancy Drew books. When we were in college, my best friend and I loved Watson’s memoirs. I suspect that I have not read all of them. I once wrote a pastiche called “Sherlock Holmes and the Twelve Apostles,” as well as a dozen or so shorter works based on the same characters. My Christmas newsletter one year was similar.
What are some of the benefits of you get from reading?
It’s mostly relaxing and occasionally I learn something useful.
One of the first science fiction novels I read and reread was Van Vogt’s The War Against the Rull, it certainly had an impact on my youthful mind.
The War Against the Rull was apparently cobbled together from six (later seven) short stories and two connecting chapters. A reminder to never throw anything out.
I read The Boxcar Children series in second grade. It was the first time I checked out books all on my own, no adult needed. I felt so important!
I remember that wonderful feeling, too, Priscilla, of being able to check out on my own the books I wanted to read. It really was empowering. I loved seeing kids experience that at the libraries I worked at. Their smiles were priceless.
My parents told everyone we had to move after 6th grade because I’d finished all the books in the local library.
I love this, Terry! Warms my librarian heart 🙂
Dale, thanks for rerunning that Nancy Drew post.
Reading is necessary, right up there with eating, sleeping, exercise. It’s my work. It feeds my voracious appetite to learn and satisfies my curiosity.
Thank you for writing that wonderful post on Nancy Drew, Debbie!
I’m with you about reading being essential to life.
I read every Nancy Drew at least twice – loved those books! They made me want to be a mystern writer but I went a different direction in my writing career.
I learned to read at the age of 4 in kindergarten. Moved immediately through all the Dick and Jane books. I’m grateful for my grandpa who inspired my love of reading, and for my parents who gifted me with books and took me to the library every week.
Your experience is another wonderful example of the impact that supportive family have on young readers, Jane. I also treasured books given to me by my parents, grandparents and aunts and uncles. It really makes a difference, doesn’t it?
Love reading and when I hear someone say they don’t have time, or don’t like reading, I feel sorry and pity for them.
Love Sherlock Holmes and encourage anyone else who does to check out if there is a Sherlock Holmes Scion near you. Good timed with people that love the character.
My reading career started with Spider-Man comics.
Thanks for mentioning comic books, Warren! Some of my earliest reading was Iron Man and Daredevil comics. Excelsior!
I’ll take reading over math class ANY day! 😎 I’m curious and wish I could remember the very first book I ever read (as opposed to books read to me when I was a young’un.). I was a Hardy Boys reader as a kid but did occasionally read Nancy Drew.
In Deb’s excerpt where she talks about it not being realistic that Nancy’s only job was an UNPAID one solving mysteries–this is one of the most fun things about reading (or watching fictional tv shows). They can spend money like there’s no tomorrow without having to worry where it comes from; they can smash up cars one week and be driving a perfect replica the next; they can have a TBI one week and be perfectly healed the next; protags don’t get physical malfunctions when they age, etc etc. I remember well how impressed I was that Frank & Joe could pick up and take off to wherever and just do their thing–they didn’t have to get an excuse from school, save money for the trip, etc. In other words, reading is a wonderful escape from reality! LOL!
I agree about not having to worry about money being one thing about TV mysteries, BK. As a best-selling mystery author in the finest TV/Movie tradition, Jessica Fletcher was able to travel anywhere and had that freedom. In many ways, she’s the senior version of Nancy Drew–supremely curious, adventurous, determined to solve every mystery that crosses her path. And she does it while still writing all the time 🙂
Wonderful post, you four!
Nancy Drew, Hardy Boys, Agatha Christie, then on to Ken Follett-all before I reached my sophomore year in high school…and if I ran out of books to read, I’d just start over. 🙂
I think the book(s) that changed me the most were Chronicles of Narnia. The C.S. Lewis talent of seamless blending of fantasy and reality did a number on my own imagination.
Happy weekending, everyone, and I’ll see you in the Reading Room…
Thanks, Deb! Rereading a favorite book is something I need to do more often, only there’s so many books I have yet to read 🙂
Have a great, reading filled weekend.
Books opened the world for me, and I can’t imagine my life without the privilege of reading. The first book I remember reading on my own was “The Little Engine That Could.”
Like so many young girls, I was enchanted by the Nancy Drew books.
Hi Kay! What a great book for your first read on your own.
Late to the party, Dale. Had an all-day book signing yesterday.
I think everything we read refines our emotional intelligence, increases empathy, and enriches our lives.
An all-day book-signing! That had to be fun and exhausting at the same time, Sue.
I think you are absolutely right—reading “refines our emotional intelligence” and “increases our empathy,” as well as “enriching our lives.” Very well said!