I don’t think that schools should
stop teaching the classics. It isn’t WHAT we read; it’s what we have to do
while reading it. Analyzing every aspect of the book and finding themes and
elements that aren’t even there is what kills reading. I could lie in bed and
read Jane Eyre for a few hours. It wasn’t my favorite but it was a totally
tolerable book. However, since I didn’t want to make notes and highlight the
living crap out of it, I avoided reading it all together. Then it became a
pattern to just avoid reading the books so I wouldn’t have to active read. When
my second tri teacher started checking our active reading I developed a new
system. I would not read the book, but put a clean post it on every other page,
highlight any random sentence and then go back through and write the “meaning”
of that sentence on the post it. It proved to be an effective system, however I
wasn’t actually reading.
I like to read the classics in
school though. Otherwise I would never read them and there are a lot of them
that I really like. I loved To Kill a Mockingbird and I liked Color of Water
and Romeo and Juliet. They were all good stories but I didn’t even finish the
first two because they give us so much to do and analyze in so little an amount
of time. I always wanted to go back and finish them but we would have already
moved on to the next book so I never got around to it.
There definitely is a difference
between literary and commercial. Literary is more fancy and creative whereas
commercial just tells a story. I think that literary book authors should get
credit for being talented writers but if the commercial book sells, those
writers deserve the money. I think commercial writers get a really bad rap.
A classic is something that everybody wants to have read and nobody wants to read - Mark Twain
A classic is something that everybody wants to have read and nobody wants to read - Mark Twain
I also really liked To Kill A Mockingbird and Color of Water, but I think you bring up a good point about how schools make you analyze every part of a book, and that's what truly kills the love of reading.
ReplyDeleteI completely agree with you. Some of the best books really are the classics people just can't see that sometimes between their post-its. (btw your "system" was pretty smart :P)
ReplyDeletei agree that they makes us do all this work while reading, that we dont even get to enjoy the book
ReplyDeleteI agree that what we do while reading, like trying to analyze every part of the book, is killing the love of reading.
ReplyDelete