Wednesday, April 14, 2010

Selecting books!


My favorite way to choose a book to read is to go along the library book shelves (or bookstore book shelves), looking at the rows of books until something catches my eye. I have used this method of book selection since I was a kid and it still works for me.  I look for things like a great font, aesthetically pleasing cover art, a clever title, interesting subtitle, or anything else that somehow catches my interest.  I also have an aversion to really, really thick books for some reason!  :o)  Once something catches my eye, I read the summary that is inside the front cover or on the back of the book to see if the books sounds interesting.  As an adult, I do employ other methods for finding books to read and I do love the search options offered by the Internet (long live the Internet!). I'm just saying this method of physically scanning the shelves is my time-honored favorite.

I love to go to other libraries in the county and just look and look.  I've looked through the local library's rows, particularly in Young Adult Fiction and Juvenile Fiction, so often that it looks somewhat familiar.

Somehow I must have perfected my talents for book selection because besides selecting books for myself, my children like me to select books for them, too.  I willingly find books for them . . . all the time.  For example, today I have more than twenty books checked out on my library card--books for the four of us.  I enjoy looking for books they might want to read.  I have tried to understand their tastes in books and then I try to find books to suit their individual tastes. I don't mean to sound like I always find perfect books for them, because I do find a certain percentage of duds.  But that is OK.  It is all part of the process.  I find duds for myself every so often, too.

I will often read the same books I select for the kids, either before or after the kids read them, because the books sound interesting to me, too, but I do not read every single book I select for them.

I take the task seriously to search for good books for them to read because I want my children to be readers.  I think I've helped my two oldest children to be avid readers.  I'm still working on my youngest--still a work in progress--but we have hit on some great finds this past year. He's my most difficult to please.

I find this odd that they would defer to me.  I would never have wanted anyone else to make my recreational reading choices for me and I would have hated to miss out on looking through all those rows and rows of books.  I've sometimes wondered if my children can even select their own books to read (they actually can . . . ;o).  Through the years they have all thought, and a couple of the kids think even still, that their school libraries "don't really have books" or "don't really let people check them out" or "just have school stuff" or "have nothing to read."  Bizarre but understandable because I have so completely handled that whole book selection process.  I've decided that even though they wouldn't confess to my having "MAD book selection SKILLZ," I must do or they would have stuck out on their own long ago. :o) Ha!

So here's to books and to looking through rows and rows of books! I love it! I'll see ya in the stacks!

1 comment:

Claire said...

I too would never have let anyone choose my books either!
I love library's!
I love everything about them!
I too can spend hours and hours there!