Monday, August 30, 2010

Post 1: Reading Preferences Q&A

Q1: What associations do you have with reading? Do you have any personal history that makes reading seem more or less pleasurable?
  • I have always been a bookworm, and I would rather read a good book over watching tv. Reading calms me and is so much better than a movie when you want to just get away. When I was little, my mother would read to me every night, and it is something that has stuck with me all my life.
Q2: Why do you read?
  • I read because I love it. It is one of the things that makes me feel at home.
Q3: What has been your best experience in a literature course? (high school or college)
  • Junior year of high school at Lafayette High School in Lafayette, LA. My teacher Mrs. Anderson had  a way of making her students fall in love with what she was teaching.
Q4: What has been your worst experience in a literature course? (high school or college)
  • I honestly have liked all of my literature classes. I enjoy reading and writing, so it is never a problem to do it for a grade.
Q5: What college-level literature courses have you taken in the English department?
  • English 203 - Intro to Literature
  • English 313 - Medieval English Literature
Q6: Compared to other literature courses you have taken, what do you expect will be the level of difficulty of this course? Why?
  • I have never blogged, so I think that will be the hardest part of this class for me. I have enjoyed the few books I have already read off of the required list, so I look forward to reading the rest.
Q7: What themes do you look for when you read literature for adults?
  • As long as the first chapter is good enough to draw me in and create an interest in the characters, I will usually finish it.
Q8: What are your favorite books written for adults?
  • Right now its the Code Name series by Christina Skye. (But it changes all the time.)
Q9: How do you determine whether a book you read is good?
  • If I can't put it down until I am finished and have to find out what else that author wrote. My favorite thing to do is go to the library and just grab a book. If i like the first few chapters I will finish it then look for other things the author has written.
Q10: Do you think it is a good idea to study children's literature?
  • Yes.
Q11: Why do you think scholars study children's literature?
  • I think it is important to understand the way a child looks at a book and takes away a message that an adult may not have picked up on. A theme that means one thing to a student our age may be seen completely different by a ten year old.
Q12: When you think of "children's literature," what comes to mind?
  • Harry Potter
  • Where The Wild Things Are
  • The Polar Express
  • Goodnight Moon
Q13: What do you look for when you search for a children's book?
  • I have only ever bought children's books for my two little cousins who are 6 and 9. I gave them the books my mother had saved for me when i was small, but when they got older they requested what they wanted. I don't have much experience with children's books outside of that.
Q14: Why would you look for a children's book? What do you do with children's books?
  • I look for children's books because my little cousins love to read. Whenever I visit, I bring them a new book, and they also get one in their Christmas goodie basket.
Q15: What children's books do you most admire?
  • Harry Potter - I read the books as they were released, but I can reread them now and love them just as much.
Q16: What were your favorite children's books as a child?
  • My favorite authors when I was younger were J.K. Rowling, Orson Scott Card and Tamora Pierce
Q17: In what contexts did you read children's books as a child?
  • I had to read certain books for A.R., but I also read the books I chose from the library. 
Q18: Are there certain themes that interest you in children's books?
  • I don't read a lot of children's books anymore, so not really.
Q19: Are there certain types of books that you think children shouldn't read?
  • No. Every child should be allowed to read whatever he/she wants. If it is something the child may not understand yet or parents are not sure about, then the parents should read it with them. 
Q20: How do you judge whether a children's book is good?
  • If I can read the book and not focus on the fact that the main character is ten years younger than me, then it is a good book.
Q21: What do you think of when you think of fantasy?
  • Ender's Game by Orson Scott Card
Q22: Do you like fantasy literature? Why or why not?
  • Yes. I don't know if there is a specific reason, I just enjoy reading it.
Q23: Explain your reaction when you learned that this course would focus on fantasy.
  • I didn't have a problem with that. However, I was a bit suprised to see that of the thirteen books on the list, I had only read one (Harry Potter) as a child. Now my Mom can't say I have read the whole library.
Q24: Rank the following from most to least valuable:
  • Nonfiction - 7
  • Poetry - 8
  • Historical Fiction - 1
  • Romance - 2
  • Fantasy Fiction - 5
  • Science Fiction - 6
  • Horror - 9
  • Mystery - 4
  • Adventure - 3
Q25: Explain your choice for #1 and #9 above.
  • #1 - I love historical fiction, especially historical romance. I am a history major, and I enjoy reading different authors' oppinions on actual events in history.
  • #9 - I do not like horror. I am the scardy cat that sleeps with the lights on if I see a horror movie or read a horror book. Not for me at all.