ecaterin: Miles's face from Warrior's Apprentice. Text: We have advanced to new and surprising levels of bafflement. (Default)
ecaterin ([personal profile] ecaterin) wrote in [personal profile] lightreads 2011-04-02 03:32 am (UTC)

Yes!!! I've so far read two complete sets of Harriot books to little bitty pieces. They're all missing pages and covers. Time to get set number three in hard-back now that I'm all grown up-ed :) He's a phenomenal story teller. I never get tired of reading his stuff. Even though I know every story, he still makes me laugh till I cry, and cry till I sob.

The only reason I didn't actually miss any of Narnia is because I bought a collected, illustrated hard-back to read to my kids. Of course, we read the cover right OFF the thing cause they loved to look at the pictures. There's a reason for this. I almost NEVER read them books with pictures, because they'd interrupt me all the time to ask whether there were pictures, or they'd keep hopping up and down to look over my shoulder, or they'd never fall asleep because every time they heard the page turn they'd be all IS THERE A PICTURE ON THAT PAGE??? I remember the GLEE I felt when I got books 2, 3, and 4 of Harry Potter on my Palm device, cause I could read at bed time in complete darkness and they'd fall asleep!

These boys could hear hours and hours of reading per day. When the youngest was in utero or the years he was nursing, I was sitting so many hours per day that it was not uncommon for me to do 4 hours of reading aloud. At that quantity of reading, I insisted on reading books that *I* liked :P When they got old enough to operate the CD player and we started checking out books on CD, their typical intake of read aloud went up to about 10 hours per day :P

Hmm. I'm chatty tonight! Sorry! :D

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