Posted on 01/15/2020 11:24:34 AM PST by steveben
I know The Snowy Day very well, having read it to my children dozens of time in the late 80s when they were small. Its a lovely little story about a small boy who goes out to play in the snow, making footprints, etc. At one point he puts a snowball in his pocket to put in the refrigerator later, and is sad to find out it had melted. Its very innocent and non-ideological. The little boy In the story happens to be African American (thus the diverse label, I suppose), but it has no bearing on the story.
I guess the reason Dreams from My Father and It Takes a Village didn't make the top ten is that most New Yorkers bought their own personal copies.
with the exception of Harry Potter, these were required reading material in school. Whether it was grade school or high school.
I do wonder, which books were least likely to be returned? (Bundy’d)
“Ive been to the Central Lib in downtown LA. which is 8 floors. You are correct. but you forgot one thing: its also known as the Homeless Hilton.”
The local public library is an after-school social hall and drug bazaar for kids from the nearby high school.
Rules For Radicals
It hits me as odd each time someone walks into my den/ office ands sees the wall to wall floor to ceiling books, and it taken aback. Invariably one of the questions will be “have you read All of them?” To which my reply is: yes, and most of them several times.
These exhibit a wide range, from textbooks, technical manuals to some fiction, a book or few on photography interests, though better than half are history and commentary on history. There are even books by FReepers.
Giving up watching TV was such a boost in my reading time.
Interesting... To Kill a Mockingbird.
I believe that it is banned our grade school.
Pre-K and Kindergarten teachers are often the public library's best customers. They don't have to buy the books they read to the kiddies every day, and the selection is better than the school library.
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