Letter to Oprah from Harper Lee:
Do you remember when you learned to read, or like me, can you not
even remember a time when you didn't know how? I must have learned from
having been read to by my family. My sisters and brother, much older,
read aloud to keep me from pestering them; my mother read me a story
every day, usually a children's classic, and my father read from the
four newspapers he got through every evening. Then, of course, it was
Uncle Wiggily at bedtime.
So I arrived in the first grade, literate, with a curious cultural
assimilation of American history, romance, the Rover Boys, Rapunzel, and
The Mobile Press. Early signs of genius? Far from it. Reading was an
accomplishment I shared with several local contemporaries. Why this
endemic precocity? Because in my hometown, a remote village in the early
1930s, youngsters had little to do but read. A movie? Not often--movies
weren't for small children. A park for games? Not a hope. We're talking
unpaved streets here, and the Depression.
Books were scarce. There was nothing you could call a public library,
we were a hundred miles away from a department store's books section,
so we children began to circulate reading material among ourselves until
each child had read another's entire stock. There were long dry spells
broken by the new Christmas books, which started the rounds again.
As we grew older, we began to realize what our books were worth: Anne
of Green Gables was worth two Bobbsey Twins; two Rover Boys were an
even swap for two Tom Swifts. Aesthetic frissons ran a poor second to
the thrills of acquisition. The goal, a full set of a series, was
attained only once by an individual of exceptional greed--he swapped his
sister's doll buggy.
We were privileged. There were children, mostly from rural areas, who
had never looked into a book until they went to school. They had to be
taught to read in the first grade, and we were impatient with them for
having to catch up. We ignored them.
And it wasn't until we were grown, some of us, that we discovered
what had befallen the children of our African-American servants. In some
of their schools, pupils learned to read three-to-one--three children
to one book, which was more than likely a cast-off primer from a white
grammar school. We seldom saw them until, older, they came to work for
us.
Now, 75 years later in an abundant society where people have laptops,
cell phones, iPods, and minds like empty rooms, I still plod along with
books. Instant information is not for me. I prefer to search library
stacks because when I work to learn something, I remember it.
And, Oprah, can you imagine curling up in bed to read a computer?
Weeping for Anna Karenina and being terrified by Hannibal Lecter,
entering the heart of darkness with Mistah Kurtz, having Holden
Caulfield ring you up--some things should happen on soft pages, not cold
metal.
The village of my childhood is gone, with it most of the book
collectors, including the dodgy one who swapped his complete set of
Seckatary Hawkinses for a shotgun and kept it until it was retrieved by
an irate parent.
Now we are three in number and live hundreds of miles away from each
other. We still keep in touch by telephone conversations of recurrent
theme: "What is your name again?" followed by "What are you reading?" We
don't always remember.
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