Wednesday, June 04, 2025

IWSG: Books????

First Wednesday of the month means time to post a response to The Insecure Writer’s Support Group’s monthly Blog Hop. Here's the June 4 question: What were some books that impacted you as a child or young adult?

Books were an escape for me. I could fall into a book and ignore all else around me -- even meal time. Libraries were quiet. Each shelf beckoned. Once I could check books out, I started with "A" and kept going. Even today, when life becomes chaotic and I don't want to watch the news, a new story beckons. Maybe this is why I became a writer many decades later, entranced by words and the mystery behind an unfolding story.

I remember reading Hemingway's The Old Man and the Sea in my school library and trying to hold back my tears. I was drawn to adventure and now can't remember the book that spawned my dream to travel by ship around the Horn. Other favorites included: Louisa May Alcott's Little Women (somehow I was Jo and Beth at the same time); George Orwell's Animal Farm, Robert Heinlein's Stranger in a Strange Land, Frank Herbert's Dune, and pretty much anything by Ray Bradbury. As a teenager, I used to babysit for one family who kept a box of science fiction in the basement. I read them all. 

Today, i-pads beckon. My grandchildren might start reading. The thirteen year old is carrying around two library books, one Japanese manga, and the other a non-fiction book about police work behind crime scenes. At least, she's reading.


Image by jenikmichal


14 comments:

  1. I remember hating Old Man and the Sea when I was young; probably because I had to read it for school, and I didn't really get it. My kids read a lot, probably more than I did at their age. They're mostly reading new popular stuff (probably the equivalent of Babysitter's Club and Goosebumps when I was a kid, or Hardy Boys and Nancy Drew for older generations).

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    1. Did you read For Whom the Bell Tolls? That was a tough read in grade school. I remember being shocked by stories about Ernest Hemingway when I got older since I thought so highly of him. Glad to know your kids read a lot. My grands are just getting started . . . Thank you for visiting!

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  2. I read Little Women and many classics as a kid too. I still read all the time.

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    1. Nice to see so many others who love reading. Allen just told me there's a new followup novel to Little Women by Geraldine Brooks. You might enjoy it!

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  3. You read science fiction - very cool!

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    1. I'm not sure I do believe in aliens, although that would be a good excuse for some of the craziness going on. Reading science fiction? Always a treat. And I think you do too!

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  4. You've mentioned some of my favorite bookss.
    https://substack.com/home/post/p-164762814

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    1. Thank you for visiting, C. Lee. Looking forward to finding out more about your reading favorites at your post!

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  5. The county book mobile came to our tiny public school. Our teacher let us go out to the book mobile. I loved the smell of the books and checked out as many as I could each time they came. It was a special event! I too still read as much as I can!

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    1. Dear Sandy, Your comment brought back memories! When my sister and I spent summers with our grandparents, that book mobile was such a treat. We too could check out as many books as we liked. I still love going to the library; luckily, two are nearby! Be well, my friend.

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  6. I have always been a reader, but my tastes always leaned towards speculative fiction. I never liked reality in fiction, so Hemingway was never among my favorites. Instead, I tried to find stories about places far away, with magic or space travel. In Russia in the 1970s and 1980s, it was mostly myths and legends from around the world and whatever science fiction writers were translated into Russian. When I immigrated to Canada and discovered the blooming genres of fantasy and sci-fi, it felt like heaven.

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    1. Reading is like that, Olga. I haven't read science fiction in a while. My current escape is romantic suspense . . . with happy endings. Canada is such a beautiful country; we enjoy visiting there -- when we can.

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  7. I didn't read much as a young person, but in my late 30s, I dove into romance and discovered I was drawn to historical westerns.

    Re: your suggestion... After a couple of scandals in the recent past, NaNo is no more. That's why the 'May I Write a Novel' challenge was started.

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    1. Thank you, Melissa. I like historical westerns as well and will check out that new novel writing challenge. Hope to 'see' you there!

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