Thursday, 30 May 2019

A Walk with Thambi


In recent times, few picture books have enthralled me as much as this one. I have been using it in my Library Education Sessions for teachers, to introduce them to the power of children's literature and the magic of picture books.  Everywhere I have introduced this gem of a book, it has been received with admiration by adults and children. Here is a brief review of the book:




ABOUT THE BOOK

“We were late. We were running in the street. We had played in the river, and we had climbed trees …” Everything Amma had said NOT to do! Woven into this story of everyday fun lit up by Proiti Roy’s joyous pictures, are sensory descriptions, and visual details like a walking stick in the boy’s hand, the dog guiding his friend … clues that gently tell us that the boy is blind.





What Works:
A Walk with Thambi is a beautifully written tale that features a blind boy and his guide-dog without ever using the words ‘blind’ or ‘guide’. It normalizes the state of blindness – Thambi happens to be blind just like another child might happen to be allergic to brinjal – neither of these realities needs to prevent children from living life the way they’d want to. 


This book is one of those little gems that rekindles your faith in the power of a picture book. It has sparse text and wonderfully speaking pictures, and as a reader, one feels compelled to go through the text and the illustrations again and again, marvelling all the while at how effectively they reveal the story, even when you are not observant enough to notice.

The text and the art work wonderfully together and both are an integral part of the narrative.

It was short-listed for the 2019 The Hindu Young World-Goodbooks Awards for children’s books in the Picture Book (Story) Category.


CONCLUSION
This delightful book should be included in every school library, and be read by the parents of every child who is considered ‘disabled’. A child’s ‘disability’ does not have to define or constrain her. She is as ‘normal’ as the next child and has access to an equally rich world and worldview.


BOOK DETAILS
Author: Lavanya Karthik
Illustrator: Proiti Roy
Language: English
Page Extent: 28
Price: 175
ISBN: 978-93-5046-945-3
Publisher: Tulika Publishers 2017
Subject Category: Fiction/Picture Book/Inclusive

Wednesday, 13 March 2019

Meena Kakodkar's Salkantlo Jadugar

It's #femmeMarch and I will be reviewing books by women writers. Or books featuring strong women characters. I may have lots of nice things to say about them. Or not. But it will be an honest and fair review.

Today's text is unusual on two counts. It's a play, not a novel or collection of short stories. And, it's in Konkani, not English (as are most of the books I review here)

Salkantlo Jadugar is set in ancient times - times when you had queens and kings ruling the land, wicked magicians stalking the land in search of means of increasing their power over others, and sages who could predict the future and dish out magic mantras and herbs. 

However, it's also a surprisingly 'modern' play, with a princess who speaks her mind and makes use of logic to get her way rather than rely on long, silky hair or glass slippers; the king and queen actually trust their daughter to behave sensibly and do not choose to  lock her up in the castle tower when danger threatens; and while the princess does need two young boys to come to her rescue, there is no talk of her marrying either of them when she returns home safely.  They simply continue as friends and playmates. 

There's also a charming little frame narrative structure which emphasizes the importance of stories, including popular Konkani folktales that speak of incest, and death. The play was written for school children to perform, and published later. Altogether, this was an unusual find, and well worth the time taken to read it. It's written in the Nagari script.


The playwright, Meena Kakodkar, is a Sahitya Akademi awardee and has authored several books - for children and for adults. 

Sunday, 10 March 2019

The Sleeper and the Spindle

It's #femmeMarch and I am reviewing books by women, or books featuring women characters. A review a day. I may not always have nice things to say about the books, but my review will be fair and honest. Read on...



For today's review, I chose to go with a male author - Neil Gaiman, and a male illustrator - Chris Riddell - but then I just loved the feminist take they offer on the world's best-known fairytales. Having said that I must also say it has the most gorgeous black-and-white-and-gold illustrations by Chris Riddell (Duh, like that's new!)

The Sleeper and the Spindle is a fairytale for young adults. It brings together the stories of Snow White and Sleeping Beauty. No, let me correct that. It brings together the characters of the tales of Snow White and Sleeping Beauty. No, that's not true, either. The Sleeper and the Spindle is a fairytale featuring three women - each of them is a strong woman, refusing to be a two-dimensional cardboard character. There's a queen who, on the eve of her wedding, decides it's more important to save her kingdom than speak her vows, there's an old woman whose hair on her scalp is grey and sparse but her determination is strong and fierce, there's a girl sleeping on a massive fourposter for seventy years - with a purpose. 

This book is one of those rare books where the text and the illustrations enrich each other, and the reader's experience as well. Gaiman's concluding words are going to stay with me a long time and so is Riddell's illustration on the page.

The Sleeper and the Spindle takes your expectations and turns them on their head - every last one of them. Where Cinderella sheds her rags for a ballgown, the queen in this tale exchanges her wedding gown for a coat of chain mail. While fairytales focus on the 'bright and beautiful' future, Gaiman reminds us that our past makes us what we are, and what it makes of us is our choice. "There are always choices" as the queen reminds herself. 

And that's why this tale is a must-read. In an interview, Gaiman had referred to fairytales as loaded guns or bombs. With Gaiman narrating fairytales, yes, they will certainly blow the cobwebs from our minds, and bomb all stereotypes to nothingness. 

Author: Neil Gaiman
Illustrator: Chris Riddell
ISBN: 978-0-06-239824-6
Publisher: Harper Collins
Age: 11+

Saturday, 9 March 2019

Shah Jahan and the Ruby Robber by Natasha Sharma

It's #femmeMarch and I am reviewing books by women, or books featuring women characters. I may not always have nice things to say about the books, but my review will be fair and honest. Read on...

(This review first appeared in GoodBooks.in. http://www.goodbooks.in/version2/2019/02/22/shah-jahan-and-the-ruby-robber/)



Shah Jahan, the Great Mughal Emperor, is hopping mad. Someone has replaced the precious Timur Ruby on his new throne with a … plum! What’s worse, plums are suddenly turning up everywhere. Who can help the emperor solve this mystery?



What Works:

  • Part of Duckbill’s History-Mystery series, this book, like the others in the series, blends history and story together in an imaginative way.
  • Since the book is aimed at younger readers, the length, the chapterisation, the sentence structure, the use of repetition (such as in the opening lines: “A great Mughal king must not hop. He must not skip. He must not high-five.”) – all these elements work very well.
  • Unlike the first couple of books in the History-Mystery series, such as Akbar and the Tricky Traitor and Ashoka and the Muddled Messages, which are not well-grounded in history and present the reader with two-dimensional cardboard characters, Shahjahan and the Ruby Robber evokes the period in which it is set much better and offers us glimpses into the eccentricities of some of the characters.
  • Having Shahjahan’s children solve the mystery for him is a very good idea. It serves as a reminder that history is made not merely by famous folks, powerful people and other adults, but also by children, and even a little toddler. Young readers are likely to appreciate this inclusion.
  • What does not work:
  • Natasha Sharma researches exhaustively and writes well but is not always able to integrate her research into the story or plot the intrigues and conspiracies convincingly.
  • Dara Shikoh, Shah Jahan’s eldest son, is presented rather shabbily in the story. Why on earth would he suddenly utter the words, “As the great poets say: The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog”? Not only is this anachronistic, it in no way adds to the story or to the character.
  • Considering that Shahjahan’s court was fabulously wealthy and magnificent, one wishes that the illustrations had been in colour so that they could have evoked the splendour and grandeur.

CONCLUSION

A book for a 7-9-year-old that is sure to make her laugh and, hopefully, become interested in history. Some of the inauthentic bits should have been edited out, though.


Book Details
Author: Natasha Sharma
Illustrator: Lavanya Naidu
Language: English
Page Extent: 70
Price: 199
ISBN: 978-93-83331-68-0
Publisher: Duckbill 2017
Age Group: 7-9 years 

Friday, 8 March 2019

Dada's Useless Present

It's Femme March and Women's Day as well, and so I have decided to post a review a day on a book written by a woman. Maybe I will say nice things about the book, maybe I won't. But I will strive to be fair and honest.

Beginning with the first of my #femmeMarch 2019 posts ... 


This review first appeared in GoodBooks.in
http://www.goodbooks.in/version2/2019/02/12/dadas-useless-present/


Dada may be celebrating his 82nd birthday but he still considers himself spry, until a seemingly thoughtful gift from his son tells him otherwise. Dada, however, is convinced it is a useless present – until he finds many useful things to do with it!



What Works:
  • A charming story about the spirit of ageing grandparents who refuse to give up their independence. Dada gets a walking stick as a present from his son and believes it is completely useless till he finds all kinds of other uses for it except what it is meant for!
  • Author Nalini Sorensen’s text is concise and skillfully portrays Dada’s various reactions to his present without being unnecessarily verbose. She also fleshes out the relationship between Dada and his granddaughter Panu lovingly.
  • The author blends humour, affection and the little details of everyday life into an engaging tale.
  • Allen Shaw’s beautiful water-colour illustrations invite the reader into Panu’s home and show the story of how her grandfather dealt with his ‘not-so-useless’ present. Shaw captures the beauty of the interiors as well as the verdant lushness of the mango orchard close by. The clever use of different angles makes Panu’s home appear three-dimensional.
  • This picture book was the winner of the Jarul Book Award 2018.


What Does Not Work:
  • If I can pick a bone with Allen Shaw’s art, it is that the facial expressions of his characters are indiscriminately jovial and pleasant.


CONCLUSION
It’s a lovely picture book for the 6-8-year-old and encourages the reader to be innovative and think out of the box.

BOOK DETAILS
Author: Nalini Sorensen
Illustrator: Allen Shaw
Page Extent: 26
Price: 250
Publisher: Karadi Tales 2016
Subject Category: Fiction/Picture Book/Humour
Age Group: 6-8 years



Thursday, 27 December 2018

A sea prayer - for children at sea

Khaled Hosseini's book for children, Sea Prayer, was an appropriate book to read as this year slowly draws to an end. This slim children's book is a requiem to loss - the loss of home, homeland, security, identity, relationships, a way of life - the annihilating, bewildering, confounding loss faced by refugees everywhere. It is also a prayer - not for oneself but for one's child, for "the most precious cargo there ever was". Hosseini sums up the refugee's fate "unwanted, unwelcome" wherever they go, their hearts unhinged, their future as unstable and threatening as the stormy sea.   




Dan Williams, the illustrator, has transformed the emotions evoked by Hosseini's words into images that are a visual delight. There are the warm yellow tones of sunlit afternoons drenched in nostalgia, the blue-black hues that capture the uncertainty and fear in the hearts of the refugees as they wait for a perilous sea-journey to take them to safety, the bright bursts of red poppies like the laughter of children playing in the garden. 

This children's book brings the focus on an aspect of childhood that is rarely in the limelight - children at peril and in exile. 



Wednesday, 26 December 2018

Getting your child to read

Do children read these days? Never having done a survey, I can't say for sure, but going by the sales of books, and the increasing occurrence of children's literature festivals, either the kids are reading a lot, or someone out there is hoping and praying and working really hard to make sure they do!

How does one ensure that children read regularly and enjoy the act of reading? After teaching kids of all ages to love literature, here are a few tips that I know work for sure -

1. Remember they are watching you! Your child may not listen to all that you say, but she is certainly watching you as you go about your day. If you spend a lot of time on the phone, she will wish to do the same, if you like to walk around the park, she will want to go cycling there, and if you spend some time reading every day, she will pick up a book too! Do spend some time reading every day, and talk to your child about the book she is reading.




What if you aren't a reader? Well, become one. Kids love to imitate their parents and so try to read something every day. It can be the newspaper, magazines, recipe books, the atlas, or your prayer book. The point is, that you should be spending some time with your child with a book in your hand.

2. Keep some books lying around the house - That might not be welcome advice if you are the kind of parent who's obsessive about everything being in its rightful place, but, hey, you can ensure you have a little bookshelf in every room or a little basket in which nestle the books you and your child are reading currently.

3. Get to know the books that are available in the market - especially books by Indian writers. Don't get caught in the trap of buying only retold folktales, moral stories, educational books or Enid Blyton - because that's what YOU grew up with! There's nothing wrong with them, but the children's book market today has an exciting range of genres and offerings, and I am sure you'd like your child to benefit from it. Become a part of FB groups that discuss children's books and keep yourself updated with the latest and most recommended publications. 

4. Choose diverse books - read across genres and authors. don't try to stick to one sort of book. Your child may have tastes that are different from yours. Remember that a children's book serves as a window and a mirror - it offers the child a mirror to her world, and gives her an opportunity to look out into other worlds.

There's lots and lots of other ways to raise a reader - you will find out for yourself, and I will share more tips in another post. Until then, open a book ... those squiggles on the page are the password into a wacky and wild world!

Reading children's books from Japan

THE BARBER’S DILEMMA AND OTHER STORIES FROM MANMARU STREET
By Koki Oguma and Gita Wolf, illustrations by the author, Tara Books, 2017, pp. 44, Rs. 450.


Young children play in the most unstructured manner. A child holding a ladle may decide it is a mike and begin to sing a song. Moments later, the ladle becomes an umbrella, or a bus, or a spoon to stir her mother's coffee. A game of pretend swordsmanship transforms into one playing with fallen flowers and seeds, or a classroom game. There is a marvellous sense of fluidity in the way children negotiate their way through a world that seems infinitely wondrous and ever-changing.



Koki Oguma's stories and illustrations attempt this unstructured, even stream-of-consciousness method of negotiating with the world. He is an art teacher in Tokyo and created this book when he was artist-in-residence at Tara Books, Chennai, a couple of years ago. Oguma writes about the people who live and work and play on Manmaru Street. 



There's Ms. Oda who made a giant candy which reminds her of a slide, and so she and her friend slide down the candy, licking it as they go along.






And there's Mr. Tuchida who wants to build a house on his head. As the house takes shape, his neck begins to hurt with the weight of the bricks. A kind builder gently puts a compress on it. 






Mr. Isoda, a fisherman, listens to the river and begins to speak its language. HeMr. is so good at it, that a shoal of fish mistake his mouth for the river and enter it. Oguma writes, "Mr. Isoda didn't mind at all."

Oguma's tales are more like slice-of-life renditions. The word 'stories' in the title may mislead you into expecting traditionally structured tales. But as you read further, you realise that these are tales of the everyday - of the ridiculous, the philosophical, the quirkiness, and the profundity in the quotidian.

The spare quality of the text is complemented by the rich creativity of the drawings. Oguma's paintings are full of whimsy and flights of fancy rendered in a pastel palette which gives it a dream-like feel. 


Saturday, 15 December 2018

Bela Has Buck Teeth

By Mamta Nainy, Illustrated by Ankur Mitra, CBT, 2018, pp. 16, Rs. 40

This prize-winning story is a heart-warming tale of a little girl who dreads the annual Class Photo session at school as she is self-conscious about her buckteeth.  It touches lightly upon issues of body image and peer pressure. Bela finally faces the camera with a broad smile, as a compliment from a thoughtful teacher fills her with delight.  She still has her buckteeth, but that’s alright, for she now knows she has ‘the cutest smile’ ever. 

The illustrations and choice of colours are very professionally done, and the book is a delight to go through.


There are some issues however that I wish to highlight. Since these picture books are generally directed at beginner readers, it might be a good idea if the author does not use words like ‘stifle’ or ‘vigorous’. The editor also needs to check for grammar as the author tends to incorporate both past and present tense in a sentence, which is just plain wrong. 


This review originally appeared in The Book Review, November 2018.


Tuesday, 2 October 2018

Reading Dalit literature in translation - a gift that comes through many hands





After reading a whole bunch of children's books recently  - professional requirements, and just plain  fun - I picked up a book that had found its way to my TBR pile a few months ago. The book was one that was highly recommended and boy, this was one of those times when the expectations created by the hype were fully met!


Reading #kusumabale by #devanooramahadeva was a novel experience (pun intended). 

The translator #susandaniel has done a marvellous job, bending the English language to suit the rhythms of Kannada as #devanooramahadeva uses it, and creating a strange new beauty with it. 

How I long to #translate like that! 

But what was even more wonderful was the way Devanoora Mahadeva disregards the form of the novel as we know it, and defying linear time and plot strictures takes us on a journey into a world shaped by Dalit perspectives. I found the last couple of chapters most moving and mind-boggling. I don't often cry when I read books, but this was one time that I did. 


Tuesday, 11 September 2018

A return to childhood - Kampung Boy

It amazes me at times that while we share a cultural and social history with several nations in Asia, one would never guess it going by the popular culture and social media that form a large part of our lives. Our bookstores, for instance, display tons of European, American as well as African books, but almost nothing from Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand, Vietnam or China.

On a recent trip to Malaysia, therefore, I was on the lookout for children's books by local authors. It wasn't easy, for most bookstores (like the ones in India) displayed American and British children's titles or some Malaysian titles in Bahasa. After some questioning and prodding of the staff at the stores, I was delighted to find children's books by Malaysian and Chinese authors. I bought six and began reading them on returning home.

Lat published his first book for children, Kampung Boy, in 1979. It's an autobiographical narrative in which he attempts to recreate the days of his childhood living in a traditional Malay house called a kampung while growing up on a rubber plantation. 

Two years later, he followed it up with Town Boy, which describes the years he spent in Ipoh where he went to live when he was eleven. A decade later, he published Kampung Boy: Yesterday and Today juxtaposing contemporary and earlier Malay childhood using the same format of brilliantly illustrated pages, largely in black and white, and accompanying text.

  

Kampung Boy: Yesterday and Today by Lat - whose real name is Mohammed Nor - is an absolute delight to read. Lat takes us down memory lane, through homes that were full of love and inventiveness, and playgrounds where every toy had to be created by the children and their parents. The games they played included equal participation by ants, pangolins, cows, angry honeybees and sleepy pythons. Rural life is presented as exciting rather than bucolic, full of adventure and, at times, danger.


Of course, there's a lot of nostalgia and a lot of idealisation of childhood. But there's also a subtle plea to parents to cease being over-protective, helicoptering, competitive mums and dads. 






The artwork of Kampung Boy - a mixture of caricature and evocative detailing - is wonderfully expressive, enabling the author-illustrator to say a lot without using too many words. Lat doesn't follow the graphic novel format favoured by a number of contemporary writers, or the manga style that originated in Japan. Instead, moving as he does from being a newspaper cartoonist-columnist to one attempting an autobiographical narrative,  he uses the page as a canvas and fills it up with a single scene that captures the essence of the tale he wants to tell.   

I introduced the book to a group of students who have learning differences and built a reading and writing activity around it. It was heartening to see that they liked the book a great deal, and would either stay back and try and read a few more pages or come in early the next day to continue with the story. The illustrations helped them make sense of the story and the minimal text and unusual fonts used by the author made it easier for them to read the narration. 

The one thing I did not like about Lat's work was that I detected a certain internalisation of colonial attitudes, though. As the children - depicted with 'non-human' expressions - leave their 'nature-phase' behind them and enter the world of schools and academia, their faces take on more human orientations. I shall probably have to examine the whole of the Kampung series before making very definitive statements.

All in all, a great addition to your library!


Thursday, 8 March 2018

#femmeMarch – Indian YA Books and the Class Divide

A couple of years ago, I happened to listen to Andaleeb Wajid (at St. Joseph’s College where I was teaching then) talk about her books and the writing process. I hadn’t yet read any of her books - her first, Kite Strings, was published in 2009 – but was very impressed by the author herself -  warm, articulate and approachable. Dressed in a black abaya, a pastel hijab and an amused smile, she described how she managed to fit her writing into her busy life, and still have time for social media and friends. She explained that she focuses on the teen reader, for whom there aren’t too many options, and that her characters were invariably Muslim. That interested me for most Indian books for teenagers hardly ever featured Muslim or Christian or Buddhist characters, except as sidekicks.

In the last nine years, Andaleeb has published fifteen books (that’s right!) with the latest, titled Twenty Nine Going On Thirty out this month. Most of them are written for the Young Adult reader (14-24 years) and feature romance and food. Lately, she has experimented with the horror genre, which she says she enjoys reading. She works with several different publishers including Juggernaut Books who are changing the way people read (For the first time ever, I read a book on my phone with the Juggernaut app 😊). A single publisher probably wouldn't be able to keep up with her amazing output.

That afternoon, I went away telling myself I would soon read a book by Andaleeb but I didn’t (My bad). Not until this week, that is. As part of my #femmeMarch reading, I was keeping an eye out for women writers – global, local, writing for adults, teens or children. And that’s how I finally picked up Andaleeb’s Asmara’s Summer and kept my promise to myself 😊.

Asmara, the protagonist and the first-person narrator, is a pampered teenager who has had a privileged upbringing. To her absolute mortification, she is expected to spend a month of her summer holidays with her grandparents who live in an area perceived as shabby, down-market and conservative. All these years, she has not even let on to her best friends that her grandparents live there! Asmara dreads her ‘summer from hell’ with no air-conditioning, no cool stuff to do, and no Wi-Fi. But, no worries, for it’s a romance, and so good things loom ahead, including a new BFF and a neighbor who is a handsome hunk.

The best part of the book for me is that it looks at class issues in the face, at how we resort to stereotypes about ‘those’ people and ‘their style’ of dressing and the food ‘they’ like to eat. Asmara moves to Tannery Road with all these narrow labels firmly in place and even sets up a new Instagram account to bitch about ‘the bling’ and the ‘loud glitzy colours’ used by people living ‘there’. But luckily, Asmara is a thinking person, and soon, uses her critical faculties to understand others and herself better.

What did not work for me is that the narrative doesn’t take the critical gaze far enough – while Asmara makes friends in the neighbourhood, she doesn’t dwell on what underlying social structures set this area apart from posher areas in Bangalore. How do they manage with intermittent water supply? Why are the schools and college in the neighbourhood not great places to study in? Why do the Tannery Road residents have to be helped by someone from a posh part of the city? The book is a quick and easy read and contents itself by merely scratching the surface of the classist times we live in.  


Tuesday, 6 March 2018

It’s #femmeMarch! Have you read a book by a woman today?



March isn't only about the madness of the March hare, or exam fever. It's #femmemarch month and a time to celebrate women writers. And so, I spent this afternoon reading two very interesting books on Storyweaver. Not only are they written by women, they are about women too.

StoryWeaver is this amazing platform where at last count, 7313 stories have been published online in 109 languages! It is an offshoot of Pratham Books and seeks to ensure that every child in India can read a story in the language of her choice. The stories are not controlled by copyright, and children, teachers, parents and librarians anywhere in the world can read them online, download them, print them, make copies and circulate them. StoryWeaver allows you to contribute in terms of creating new stories, contributing artwork, translating or re-levelling existing stories. I cannot think of a more noble, wonderful, or applause-worthy venture.

The two books I read were Anna’s Extraordinary Experiments with Weather by Nandita Jayaraj and illustrated by the extraordinary Priya Kurian, and The Cottonwool Doctor by Michelle Mathews and illustrated by Jean de Wet. The first is a Level 3 book and the second is a Level 2 book. Level 2 books deal with simple concepts and have upto 600 words, while Level 3 books make use of longer sentences and can be upto 1500 words long. Both books are biographies, based on real people and describe women’s accomplishments in the field of science and technology.



Anna’s Extraordinary Experiments is about Dr. Anna Mani, an Indian physicist and meteorologist who built almost a hundred weather gadgets. As a child, Anna loved books and spent all her free time reading. She cried when she was gifted diamonds on her birthday as she would have preferred to receive books. 



The Cottonwool Doctor traces the life of Margaret Bulkly who lived in the nineteenth century. Her parents spent all their money on their son’s education (sounds familiar?) and had nothing left for their daughter. With help from her uncle and a family friend, she dressed like a boy, changed her name and enrolled in medical school. 

Henceforth, she was known as Dr. James Barry and travelled all over the world with no one realizing that she was a woman until AFTER she DIED. What an amazing life this brave and determined woman must have led!

Do check out StoryWeaver.org.in for some interesting children’s books.

Tuesday, 20 February 2018

On meeting Vidya Mani



Last week, I was at a workshop at Christ, Bangalore, where I met an amazing person called Vidya Mani. She radiated positivity, energy and passion for children’s books, having made it her life’s mission to get children to read. And read some more. She calls herself a children’s books ‘writer-editor-bookclubber-bookshopper’ and leads an incredible life immersed in children’s books.

Vidya is behind several children’s magazines, including Chatterbox, Quest, Junior Quest, Hoot and Toot, a founding member of Bookalore, a children’s book club in Bangalore, managing editor of Goodbooks, a children’s book review site, and a co-owner of Funky Rainbow, a travelling children’s bookshop. Whew, she certainly sounds like she has packed the achievements of several lifetimes into one, doesn’t she?

What I love about Vidya (other than her infectious enthusiasm, her smile, and her vast collection of books) is her belief in and dedication to INDIAN children’s literature. She not only writes for children, she also promotes books by other Indian authors.

And the best thing I like best about her is that she thinks children should be FREE to decide what they want to read, and that adults should let children read for FUN, rather than information and improvement.

May her tribe increase!