top of page

The Reading Challenge

Every child must learn to read.

The Gift of a Book

 

What do you give someone who has everything? A book.

 

What do you give someone who has nothing? A book.

 

A  book can give them hope, the power to dream of what life might be.

 

Give your best friend a book you’ve enjoyed. Give your local school a book you think will inspire kids, or just make them laugh. If you want your kids to be intelligent, give them books: reading creates new neural connections in a child’s brain, by stimulating the growth of new neurons as they imagine the world the writer has put on paper. If you want your kids to be more intelligent, give them more books. 

 

A book is a small, transportable, delightful universe you can keep in your pocket, handbag, glove box or desk drawer, and take out to vanish into when the world is not as you would like it to be.

 

But mostly, a book is shared. Give a new book. Share an old book. (I love the ones with crabby comments in the margins and chocolate stains – or maybe they are bloodstains – on the pages.)

 

A book lasts longer than a box of chocolates or a bunch of roses. It is calorie free, cholesterol free, guilt free and does not provoke allergic reactions. But it can also be so powerful that tyrants like Pol Pot felt they had to massacre book readers.  A book can lead you to paradise or rebellion. A small shabby paperback can cross the world a  hundred times, bringing it’s magic to thousands of readers.

 

And everyone can read.

Click on the links below for more information on the following topics.

Rights of the child reader

An author's manifesto

Dyslexia

A passport to reading

My word building book

Finding the Magic Book

Eating your words

The art of reading with sticky fingers

Why libraries matter

The gift of a book

Helping with reading

How to get kids reading

Reading to my grandson

The books that changed me

Eight ways not to read a book

Adventure reading

Reading Magic

Interview with Inside magazine

Every child in every school

Sustainability and the art of never being bored

bottom of page