Talks with Teachers
Talks with Teachers
Brian Sztabnik: English Teacher, Blogger, Podcaster
In Defense of Reading
5 minutes Posted Oct 7, 2014 at 6:46 pm.
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Episode #47

I like the heft of books in my hand. I like the smooth feel of their pages and the artistry of their covers. But most of all, I love the escape that their stories provide.

I’m going to make more time for books this year. The October focus for the 30-Day Challenge is to set teaching goals and personal ones as well. But it is not just about setting them, it is about achieving them. I’m challenging myself to read one book a month and I’m counting on others in the group to hold me accountable. That’s why I’m writing this post. It is the first step in my accountability process. The next step, starting October 1st, is to read Kafka on the Shore. Then, as the day winds down and my son is tucked in bed, I will retire to the couch with Murakiami’s novel and in doing so, escape the frenzied grip of social media.

Studies show that reading sharpens and strengthens brain function and expands one’s vocabulary, but that’s not why I do it. Those are added benefits but not the primary reasons. Nor do I do it to escape the base and superficial scanning that occurs online, although reading is a welcomed reprieve. I do it, above all, because it is pleasurable. When I read I become welded to characters, get crushed by conflict, travel in time and place, and learn to empathize with others. Reading allows me to think, feel, and imagine like nothing else can.

Loving literature isn’t just an English-teacher thing. It is a human-being thing, and the more I read of imaginary people the more I understand the real people I interact with each day.

I understand the courage it takes to parent in moments of crisis because of Atticus Finch. I know the feeling of otherness because of Othello. I experience the memories of 9/11 differently through the lens of Corrigan and Jasmine. I mature artistically along with Stephen Daedalus. And I empathize with Holden’s loneliness.

Although many stories take time and effort to read, they are worth it. The prolonged satisfaction is superior to instant gratification.  I can’t say the same thing after scrolling through a Twitter or Facebook feed night after night. Even television shows and films, which can sometimes tell stories well, fall short of the satisfaction of a book. They are crafted from someone else’s interpretation. Yet I own the experience of a book, and that has made all the difference.

Here are 20 books that are worth the time:

The Giving Tree

Where the Red Fern Grows
Hamlet
On Writing: 10th Anniversary Edition: A Memoir of the Craft
On the Road
The Book Thief
 Looking for Alaska
Where’d You Go, Bernadette: A Novel
Mudbound
Frankenstein
1984
A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man
The Fault in Our Stars
The Corrections
Let the Great World Spin
Fahrenheit 451
The Complete Sherlock Holmes (The Heirloom Collection)
The Great Gatsby
The Catcher in the Rye 
To Kill a Mockingbird

 

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