Rain, especially when they happen early. Go to article > Features Nikki Giovanni: An Exclusive New Video Interview Have you ever compared books to chocolate? Nikki Giovanni has, and they aren't as different as you might think! In this exclusive new video interview with Nikki Giovanni, the poet and author discusses everything from Rosa Parks to reading with her son. Go to interview > Celebrate Hispanic Heritage Month Get ready for Hispanic Heritage Month! Our sister site, ColorinColorado.org, salutes the rich history of Hispanic culture with games, books, activities, and fun! Hispanic Heritage Month, September 15 to October 15, is a great way to celebrate a family legacy and expose students to world traditions. Go to Colorín Colorado > Get Your Ed Extras Ed Extras is a free monthly service that offers elementary schools and PTAs formatted one-page articles about learning that you can include in your parent newsletters. This month's article, Ready to Read: Heading to the Classro
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reading Quires--gasp!-- some "hard work." Hornby also reads because early in his life he discovered that books were "desperately important for my sanity." Again reading, this seems to go well beyond the notion that reading is a "leisure activity." It even implies that for Hornby reading is an indispensable reading, life-enhancing pursuit that he won't do without. Yet he is entirely willing to see other readers deprived of the kind of self-testing reading experience he himself appears to value. What's up with that? I am not the kind of critic who believes in reading books that are "good for you." Many of the posts on this blog have argued that seeking some kind of external utility of this sort is precisely the wrong way to find value in works of literature. But I can't help but interpret Hornby's article as a fit of pique against "reviews pages and our cultural commentators" (maybe especially Harold Bloom reading, whose recent book How to Read and Why is echoed in the title of Hornby's essay?) reading, who have not always fou.
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