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Focus on Reading - Week 27 - Who Has Influenced Your Reading
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In school and college, we read the typical classics, therefore lots of white male authors. In the '90's, I joined a book club at a local women's bookstore. It was a wonderful group (still going with some of the original members, but I moved away in 2002). That group introduced me to Gloria Naylor, Toni Morrison, Alice Walker, Barbara Kingsolver, Isabel Allende, and Gail Godwin among others.
More recently, GR groups and friends have regularly alerted me to books I might have missed otherwise.

my parents when I was growing up. We didn't have a real library (a tiny thing) so much of what I read was from their shelves.
Also, my good childhood friend KB the first (I had another close friend who was KB until marriage but met her later) was the one to introduce me to hard core scifi when we were 10.



My senior year of high school AP lit teacher was also a big influence. I ran into him years later and got the opportunity to thank him. So he recommended Russian authors. He’d been retired for years and was still ‘teaching’ by sharing his love of reading. He passed away last year- a great person who will be missed.

My parents - mom read childrens books to us from time we were born, and once we started reading, we read to my father when he would be resting before supper and the evening milking (dairy farmer). She also found a mail order source for Dr. Seuss and Happy Hollisters series - 2 books a month arrived like clock work. They also read Readers Digest Condensed Books and so did we. Mom mostly read non-fiction, when she had time to read, books about antiques, early american collectibles, refinishing and restoring furniture, and the Kennedys. Dad really showed he was a reader only after he retired from being a dairy farmer and then he was reading whatever he found lying around the house or at yard sales. He is the only person I know who has read The Last Days of Pompeii.
My brother Ed - 10 years older, he gave me 3 Nancy Drews when I was 10. The rest is history...mysteries were my first and enduring genre passion. Interestingly, he is not a book reader, more journals, news, magazines.
Barnard College - I grew up in a small rural community with no bookstores and very limited public and school libraries. Barnard introduced me through its affiliation with Columbia University to the vast world of college and university libraries. Then there were the nearby academic bookstores...not just a rack of paperbacks in the 5&Dime and the grocery store. I was a French studies major and the French Department offered Marguerite Duras, Sartre, Camus, Gide, Proust - a foreign world! Lastly was my friend freshman year who introduced me to steamy bodice rippers - remember Kathleen E. Woodiwiss?
Many friends but especially my friend Ellen. We met at the Si & Gar 1982 reunion concert during the long hours we staked out our spots for ourselves and our friends in Central Park. We were both reading mysteries and it led to a lifelong discussion and sharing of books. It is Ellen that challenged me to first do the Popsugar Challenge in 2016, and persuaded me to check out Feminerdy Book Club. Both have pushed me out of my ruts and to read the eclectic TBR Towers I amassed over 30 years.
Popsugar led me to GR and to PBT and thus to all of you!
Feminerdy's awesome core group of women have influenced me to read 2 genres I never was drawn to in any significant way.
I have been reading blessed. I also know I have paid it forward to my younger sisters, so many friends and even clients, and their kids and grandkids.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Last Days of Pompeii (other topics)Authors mentioned in this topic
Kathleen E. Woodiwiss (other topics)Isabel Allende (other topics)
Gloria Naylor (other topics)
Toni Morrison (other topics)
Alice Walker (other topics)
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How did they influence you?