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I'm contemplating the boxes of children's books in the basement. Some are things I inherited from my mother. Some are things I picked up in high school when I still hoped my brother would turn out to be a reader (the local library was tiny, and there were a lot books I loved that it didn't have). Some are things that I simply grabbed when I saw them out of an uncertainty as to whether or not they'd be available anywhere else.

They're in boxes because we don't have shelf space for them. As Cordelia edges toward chapter books, I've been thinking about going through those boxes. Most of the books will be too old for her for a while yet, but some might be close. I also can't predict how fast she'll improve as a reader.

I keep wondering if there's something I could do to encourage her to read chapter books. I've been holding myself back from it for fear of pushing too hard. I rather expect that it's just another thing that will happen all at once. Right now, she can read a page from a chapter book out loud to me. She just isn't ready to sit down and do that alone or to come back repeatedly to read the next page in sequence. I think she likes the notion, in theory. I don't want to make her feel like she should be doing it already and is failing (a sure method to make her stop reading altogether by making her hate reading). I want her to enjoy reading.

I'm partly thinking about this as I make up her Christmas wishlist for Scott's family. They'd love to give her books, and she's right at a transition. I don't want to ask for chapter books because I don't know when or if they'll get read. I don't want to ask for picture books because they might get abandoned at any moment (or not).

I don't even remember what's in all of those boxes. There's at least one filled with Nancy Drew mysteries and other books I got from my mother, books that had been hers when she was a girl. I don't know if they can be read without disintegrating as they're more than fifty years old. Given that our basement is cool and dry, those books may be better off down there than they'd be upstairs, but they also won't get read if they stay down there.

Date: 2008-12-03 03:31 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] evalerie.livejournal.com
I have no idea if this would work for any other kid, but, for my voracious reader, we didn't push at all. She spent a very long time devouring dozens of picture books every day, even long after I thought she could read chapter books. Eventually she got hold of a very interesting, very easy, chapter book that happened to be the start of a long series. She devoured that, and went right ahead through the whole series. Today she's happy to gobble down a mixture of chapter books and picture books -- she loves reading anything and everything.

But each kid is different, so I don't know that what was interesting for Kendra would be interesting for Cordelia.

Oh! Kendra donated most of her board books to her baby brother, but picked quite a number of favorites that she wanted to keep in her own room. I was very startled, since I'd been thinking of those books at the family's property, not her personal books. Plus I don't think she reads them anymore. They had belonged to her older brother before her, so I was assuming that we would just transfer them to the baby. But I'm okay with some board books staying in Kendra's room for now; baby Corbin at this point is only interested in some very limited books; he doesn't miss the ones that she kept, and she'll outgrow them eventually.

Date: 2008-12-04 01:04 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] evalerie.livejournal.com
Hm. Kendra's bridge into chapter books was the Rainbow Magic series. It's about two girls who find fairies. They're pretty commonly available, so you may well have already encountered them. I always expect them to be cloying and then they aren't *quite* as bad as I expected. Kendra started with "Ruby the Red Fairy," which is the first book of the (very long) series, and took off from there. If Cordelia is into fairies, then she might find these interesting too.

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