Today, a guest blog by Sands Hetherington:
I immersed my son John in stories from the time he could understand speech. Bedtime stories were an absolute essential to us, like air and food. We may not have missed five nights in ten years, even on trips. And on trips we would listen to books on tape for days in the car. I read him everything from Aesop to Tolkien to Dahl (Harry Potter hadn't come along yet). By the time John was twelve, we had gone through most of Dickens and Victor Hugo. So he was always immersed in stories, and man did it ever work! He got an M.A. at Edinburgh University with Firsts in German and Russian, reads two or three books a week, and still watches Hobbit movies.
If you're determined to get kids hooked, there's something you can do in addition to bedtime stories: Get them involved! Let me illustrate by telling how my Night Buddies stories got started. The series features John Degraffenreidt and
Crosley. John is a young kid pretty much
like my own and Crosley is a bright-red
crocodile. He sneaks John out of the
house for adventures on nights when John isn't ready to go to sleep.
This is how the idea for stories came
about: My son John had invented Crosley
from whole cloth. One night when I was
done reading, I may have suggested that he make up a night companion to go off to
sleep with. Or maybe I didn't suggest it. He could have taken the initiative himself. But in any case, in a day or two, there was
Crosley, red color, goofy name and all.
So at bedtime we started batting around
the Crosley stuff.
I encouraged John to make up episodes.
I mostly listened. If he did come
up with something, I told him how super it was and asked him when could I hear
the next installment. I think he was
still six. He got really facile at it,
and I got the larcenous idea of putting the two of them in a book.
In my books I had to explain why Crosley was
red, of course. (He was red because he
was allergic to water.) And the rest
fell into place fairly easily. Crosley first began as a lights-out buddy. But from there, he became part of Night Buddies Amalgamated, whose members
sneak kids out on adventures when the kids aren't ready for bed yet. That's the story formula, and John was
hooked, and I was hooked.
You may need some luck with the "getting involved" part. But anybody can
do bedtime stories, and I haven't met a child yet who didn't take to bedtime
stories. You just have to do it and do
it every night. If you do, the child
will enjoy it and look forward to it and quickly know literature as a pleasure. Then, when he learns to read, he will want to read. So get him in on the process if you
can. It's as simple as that.