
From Publishers Weekly:
Named for two literary characters ("Alice" from Lewis Carroll and "Ozma" from L. Frank Baum), the author is the daughter of a Philadelphia-area elementary school librarian. Father and daughter embarked on a streak of reading-out-loud sessions every night before bed as Ozma was growing up. At first they decided on 100 nights straight of reading before bed—a minimum 10 minutes, before midnight, every night, no exceptions—then it stretched to 1,000, and soon enough the author was headed to college and they had spent eight years straight reading before bedtime, from Oz stories to Shakespeare. Reading with her father offered a comforting continuity in the midst of her mother's disquieting move away from the family, her older sister's absence as a foreign exchange student, and the parsimoniousness of her single father. Ozma's account percolates chronologically through her adolescence, as father and daughter persevered in their streak of nightly reading despite occasional inconveniences such as coming home late, sleepovers (they read over the phone), and a rare case of the father's laryngitis. Ozma's work is humorous, generous, and warmly felt, and with a terrific reading list included, there is no better argument for the benefits of reading to a child than this rich, imaginative work.
3 comments:
Sounds like a very sweet book, and I bet it has a great reading list! Thanks for posting.
It was written by a very young lady (just out of college). So far the strength of the book lies in the idea of a reading pact or promise between a parent and a child. In the middle of the book, there are a couple of chapters about her sister leaving home for a year to be an exchange student and then leaving for college. Those have been the most touching bits. I'm afraid, like so many other memoirs these days, it would have made a more powerful single essay or article than full length book, but we'll see.
Maria and I have already adopted the idea of a reading promise. It officially started just a few days ago on her 10th birthday. We've already finished Ramona and Her Father by Beverly Cleary and have now begun Ramona the Pest.
This book is written more like a college freshman's essay, but it's hard to criticize something so sweet and well-intended. The author's dad is a devoted single father, and the author has a very deep and true bond with him. We see them through their 9-year reading streak to the author's first day away at college and then see her school librarian father battle the powers-that-be when they cut his reading time with his library classes and even take the books out of his library to make way for computers. It is a loving statement about books and their power to teach, heal, and bring people together, and for that, I hope it is read widely.
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