Posted on 06/05/2017 4:49:53 AM PDT by Kaslin
The average American child will spend 405 hours this summer watching TV and internet videos: Be a great example and read. Reading is proven to make us healthier, happier and wiser. So grab a cold Corona (keeping this example to yourself, at least for now) and pick up a book!
One evening while staying at Sea World Orlando, I looked up from dinner to notice a family of four eating beside me. All four were peering at smartphones or tablets (including the children who both appeared to be under the age of six).
Now Im certainly guilty of checking my phone while out with friends. But, fortunately, mobile phones and Wi-Fi werent yet mainstream when I was six years old. Dinners with my parents and four siblings—while often chaotic!—were memorable. We were present with each other, and I believe this was possible because: A) technology wasnt tempting and B) we spent more time reading.
Today, children (and adults) are being short-changed in terms of the interpersonal opportunities that reading offers: such as learning to think independently and analytically and to converse with other human beings in real-time.
Science shows a plethora of benefits to reading. Who knew, for example, that reading novels can make you more empathetic and personable? In contrast, a study published in the American Journal of Epidemiology found that using Facebook as a vehicle to express your feelings (i.e. by clicking Like) makes you feel glum. Makes sense: reading is active; social media is passive.
Perhaps we wouldnt have so many hyper-sensitive snowflakes on college campuses if children grew up reading books like Huckleberry Finn where young protagonists innovate and form friendships against all odds. Instead, todays young people ingest a steady stream of Photo-shopped and politically-correct images on social media.
The summer is a great time to discover or re-discover your love for reading. Heres some suggestions to get you started this summer:
101 Things All Young Adults Should Know by John Hawkins. A great read for Millennials. Hawkins wrote this book using his trademark sense of humor that youre accustomed to if you read his Townhall columns. Plus, he wears his heart on his sleeve, sharing valuable life lessons hes learned—in hopes others can learn them even earlier. Note: parents may wish to read this book before sharing with adolescents (occasional adult content is employed for constructive advice).
Confessions by Saint Augustine of Hippo. Every time I read this book, it touches and teaches me anew. In this autobiography, Augustine shares his how he succumbed to common temptations that we all face—like following the crowd and materialism—and how he then took a new path to reform his life and find objective truth.
The Hound of the Baskervilles by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. A short and gripping classic mystery that is so well-written that it retains its relevance and holds suspense even today. Warning: its a page-turner!
Steve Jobs by Walter Isaacson. If you are interested in history, technology or public policy and have only heard the mainstream media and Hollywoods accounts of Jobs life, be sure to read this book. Isaacson writes objectively, showing readers Jobs good and bad sides alike.
At heart, youll learn that Jobs was a capitalist who believed that actions—his own and others—have consequences. Youll see how he ultimately makes amends for what he considered his biggest personal regret—and how he loves his wife and family. And youll be inspired by how he fearlessly tells politicians—from Bill Clinton to Barack Obama—to be honest and stop playing political games.
Little House Series by Laura Ingalls Wilder: A great series to give or read with a young person. Learn about the history of American pioneers while reading engaging stories. Young people can learn from the struggles, adventures and retro fun that the Ingalls family shared together.
My parents read the Little House series to me and my siblings. Reading united our family, giving us common stories and mysteries to discuss. On our own, we each read as well. Reading expanded our horizons and vocabularies and helped us develop a healthy sense of wonder about the world.
I came to love reading so much that—when I finished my books—I would even read my fathers political and Second Amendment magazines! Eventually, I found myself interested in American politics. With the help of reading, a little girls heart was stirred with a fire for freedom.
I dont know where you were last summer—but I do know what youre reading this summer: great books!
I’m reading FreeRepublic ;-). And National Review Online, the Wall Street Journal, SteynOnline, Sultan Knish, City Journal, First Things, yadda yadda. That’s just on from the top line of my favorites bar!
I just informed my two boys (16 and 12) that screen time for ALL of us is limited to 2 hours a day. I love to read, as does the 12 year old (who is homeschooled). The 16 year old hates it but really needs to do it. I am going to hand him a copy of The Hound of the Baskervilles, which the 12 year old loved.
Said 16 year old goes to private school and while his school doesn’t require any specific summer reading (!!), the others around here do. Rising sophomores are required to read Fahrenheit 451, The Catcher in the Rye, and The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night time. I have all three for him on hold from the library.
I grew up on the Little House series. In a family with 4 closely-spaced kids, the downstairs bathroom was the only quiet place to read, and the books were all up on the ledge by the window, so we all read and re-read them all.
I just finished reading Rebecca by Daphne du Marier - at my wife’s insistence - and it was superb.
Not at all like the movie version most people know. I'm enjoying it.
A great book for a 12-year-old, maybe some who are older: ‘My Side of the Mountain’, Jean Craighead George. If they like it, there are two other books in the trilogy:
https://www.amazon.com/Side-Mountain-Jean-Craighead-George/dp/0141312424
I’m currently reading “Russia’s Last Gasp” by Prit Buttar about the year 1916 on World War 1’s Eastern Front. After that I will try to read Vol. 3 of David Glantz’s Stalingrad Trilogy before I work on an outline of the Federalist and Antifederalist Papers for our We The People Citizen and the Constitution team.
I’m reading the Outlander series.
Thank God I was born in the 1950’s! From 11-12 on up I left the house at 7 am and was back in by 10 pm most everyday of the summer. If I spent more then 1-2 hours inside the house during those hours t was because I was sick! Baseball, softball, basketball, bike riding. Mowing lawns caddy at the local golf course (once 15),hanging out at the one and only local snack bar on the pinball machine and the jukebox! Many nights never went in the house, slept outside under the stars!
These days once school ends I rarely see any of the neighborhood kids!
Thank God I was born in the 1950’s! From 11-12 on up I left the house at 7 am and was back in by 10 pm most everyday of the summer. If I spent more then 1-2 hours inside the house during those hours t was because I was sick! Baseball, softball, basketball, bike riding. Mowing lawns caddy at the local golf course (once 15),hanging out at the one and only local snack bar on the pinball machine and the jukebox! Many nights never went in the house, slept outside under the stars!
These days once school ends I rarely see any of the neighborhood kids!
I’m reading “Rejoicing in Christ” by Michael Reeves. I’m also reading “Rivers: A Novel” by Michael Farris Smith.
Lol.. I am reading The Black Book of Communism. It’s simply shocking to read about the history and numbers of the dead.. then read the news and see precisely the same tactics. The classes are even divided up the same.
Best novel ever written by a teenager. Next year is the 200th anniversary of its publication.
Just finished two biographies of Lucius Cornelius Sulla Felix the dictator. Am in the middle of a biography of Gaius Marius. There are some eerie similarities between the fall of the Roman Republic and the situation here today (e.g., political street violence).
Battleground Pacific, by Sterling Mace (what a name!), who was a Marine on Peleliu and Okinawa. Very good.
That’s a wonderful novel. Good ole Lucas Beauchamp. It was said that Faulkner liked the film version, which was filmed in Oxford, his hometown.
If you loved Rebecca you will love The House on the Strand by du Marier as well. One of my all time most memorable books.
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