Dear Readers: For the past 14 years, I have devoted one December column entirely to the idea of giving books to children on Christmas morning (or whatever wintertime holiday you celebrate).
I was first inspired by a sweet story I read about historian David McCulloughโs childhood, where he and his three brothers would wake up on Christmas morning to a wrapped book, left by Santa on the foot of their beds.
I communicated with Mr. McCullough, and from his home in Massachusetts he confirmed the story and generously gave me permission to use his childhood tradition to encourage families to start their holiday by unwrapping a book โ and reading together.
Thatโs the origin story of โA Book on Every Bed,โ and in the years Iโve published this appeal (to give books to children, and to start your holiday by reading together), it has grown into a literacy campaign. Schools, libraries, bookstores, churches and community centers have picked up this idea and are helping families to bring books into their households during the holiday season.
My own literacy story starts with my mother, Jane, who, despite some rough circumstances during my childhood, showed her four children that books and literature would always illuminate the way toward better things. She was the person who said to me, โWhen you have a book, youโre never alone.โ
One of my favorite memories of my mother involved catching her reading โAnna Kareninaโ while seated in the crowded bleachers during a noisy high school basketball game. (Final score: Tolstoy 1, basketball, 0).
I was allowed to get lost in the stacks of our tiny local library, eventually discovering the books that would change my life: The โChildhood of Famous Americansโ series (currently published by Simon and Schuster). I plowed through these biographies with the hunger of a young person desperate to read about โrealโ people who overcame their own childhood challenges and went on to lead extraordinary lives.
Over the years when…
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