Words, words, words What opening lines tell us

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I bet I can guess something about you. As a reader, first lines are important to you. In both literature and theater, we view first words as the opening gates into another world. As lovers of literature we yearn to cross the threshold beyond gates, and eagerly do so if the gates look inviting enough.

How do these gates entice us? What makes for a good opening line? For some, the words are so masterfully crafted that we can’t help but to read more. Take Gabriel García Márquez’s, One Hundred Years of Solitude opening line:

Many years later, as he faced the firing squad, Colonel Aureliano Buendía was to remember that distant afternoon when his father took him to discover ice.

Though we are warned this is a sad story, we are drawn into Márquez’s world by his sublime gift of storytelling. We understand and accept his challenge to our emotions because of the power of his words.

Some opening words compel us to cross the threshold if for no other reason than for the sake of curiosity. Here’s Samuel Beckett’s, Murphy, opening line:

The sun shone, having no alternative, on the nothing new.

I don’t know about you, but I have to know where Beckett is going with this. Ten words, just ten words, yet they beg many questions. Is this world so depressing that even the sun is melancholy? Or, is the sun trapped by fate; having no say it what it does? It shines because it has to, there is no other choice. And what is this place of “nothing new”? Perhaps this world is locked in a cycle of sameness, with little or no hope to escape the boredom and fatigue that these words hint at. Brave readers will have no problem entering this world. There is something oddly seductive yet sinister about this first line. As I sat and contemplated them, a vision came to mind: I saw an rundown, dusty carnival tent flap being held open by a grinning man wearing black, promising wondrous sights and sensations. Or, will it be nightmares and horrors?

There is more to the power of opening lines. Skillful writers can use them to set the stage. A good author, using just a few words, will instruct us as to what is in store; calling on us to pay attention to what we are about to read or see. Here is one of literature’s most famous opening lines

Two households, both alike in dignity, in fair Verona, where we lay our scene, from ancient grudge break to new mutiny, where civil blood makes civil hands unclean.

In case you haven’t guessed, this is from Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet. Here audiences are being warned that this will be a tragedy. These words ready us enter a world in which old wounds, not quite healed, will open up to rip anew. Oh, there will be blood!

As the play unfolds and battle lines are drawn, we the audience, try in vain to figure out who to side with. Do we offer our loyalties and sympathies to the proud and rash Montagues,or do we side with the noble yet oddly blind Capulets? Which is right?

Shakespeare knows all too well that his audience will struggle with this question. He, after all, is the master of human nature. That we will pick a side is an issue he deals with from the very start of the play. Shakespeare warns us not to do this in the first six opening words: Two households, both alike in dignity.

Shakespeare is telling us that we will see two sides, yet we should not pick one over the other, as both are equally worthy of our consideration and respect. He is telling us, in this particular play, there is no right or wrong. There is no good verses evil. These are two families that will be torn apart. And as they are alike in dignity they are equally alike in blame. By the end of the play, we realize both deserve our sympathy and scorn.

I am awed by these first six words. That it only took six words to tell us so much about the play. Break it down into four and it is even more awe inspiring; both alike in dignity. Shakespeare seems to be reminding us that there is no difference between these two families, and by extension, no difference between families in general. We know this, because this is what the play is about. It is about two normal families who struggle to navigate a world that demands adherence to social norms and traditions, no matter the cost. This was Shakespeare’s world. Class structure may have been a barrier between the wealthy and working class, (illustrated by the wall surrounding the Capulet’s garden) but yet we are asked to observe that each of these two families are alike in dignity. These two families represent traditional families, in the sense that there is nothing special about them. Shakespeare’s audience would have easily recognized themselves mirrored in the Capulets and Montages.

Shakespeare wrote these lines to remind his audience that these two families deserve our attention in equal measure; that there is no good guys or bad guys. And in a broader sense, all families are like in dignity. And that what we are about to watch cannot be judged on who is right, and who is wrong. Each deserves equal consideration. What a powerful opening message. Leave it to Shakespeare to master the art of first words.

Opening lines invite us to enter into new worlds by enticing us with their beauty. Yet many times they offer us fair warning of what we are about to see. We need to pay attention to the etchings on the gates so that we fully appreciate where we are going and what we are about to see.

The Decline of American bookstores Who will speak for the books?

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While we Shakespeare geeks celebrated his birthday yesterday, the reading world celebrated World Book Day. For several years now, the host, National Book Tokens stresses the importance of sharing books with children by dedicating a day to books. World Book Day is an event designed to remind parents and teachers the importance of raising children who read. There is never anything wrong with that.

When I see mentions of World Book Day, I am reminded of the hours I spent at bookstores with my son. I was one of those parents who started my child down the reading path at an early age. I can recall taking Alex to his first bookstore for reading time when he was only two. If memories serves, we came home with The Very Hungry Caterpillar .

By the age of nine, Alex was bored of children’s books. I took him to our local bookstore to see what was available for his reading level. This was right before Amazon became the leading source for books. Even if Amazon and the Internet were available to me I wouldn’t have known where to start.

The store owner was an older woman who was childless but never the less well acquainted to what kids liked. She pulled a large book down and said this was something the kids loved. She struggled to keep it in stock. She thought Alex might enjoy it based on the feedback she got from other children. I thought it might be too advanced for him, and far too long. But he sat down in a corner and started reading. A few pages in, he looked up and whispered, “Mom, I want this book”. Alex had fallen under the spell of Harry Potter.

All of this are just memories now. Alex is now 23 and doesn’t need me to take him to bookstores anymore. Besides, even if I wanted to, I can’t. Carson City Nevada, population 55,552 doesn’t have a bookstore. The closest one, Barns and Noble is over 30 miles away. What a sad comment on our society.

So what does this do to our reading society at large? Does it make a difference that we are forced to shop online or plan a day to travel to the next town over? Is the decline in the number of bookstores in America affecting reading?

There is a definite decline in reading in America. While reports and findings differ, one thing can be agreed upon; the number of kids who read is declining. One report suggests that social media and video games are to blame. Teenagers are more apt to spend time on their smart phones and computers, engaging with each other, sharing YouTube videos, and of course, playing the latest game. It sounds like common sense to say that these distractions are reason enough to avoid reading, but common sense also tells us that historically we’ve always had distractions. Going to the beach with my friends was a favorite pastime for me as a teen, but this didn’t dampen my love of reading. So if it isn’t distractions, what is it? If it’s not social media and technology, could we look to parents as the possible answer?

One of the fallouts of the decline of bookstores can be found in the old saying, “out of sight, out of mind”. When there are no local bookstores (sadly this is becoming the norm in towns across America) parents tend to forget about books. This fact has become painfully clear to me in the complaints I hear from my co-workers.

I don’t know what to get Karen for her birthday. What about a book? My grandson is turning five, what should I get him? What about a book? My daughter broke her leg and is home bored. What should I do? May I suggest giving her a book? At this point I’m like the Lorax, but instead of jumping up and down yelling, “I will speak for the trees?” I am trying to speak for books. And the looks and responses I get are chilling and have a lot to say about the decline of the bookstores over the last decade. Parents have lost interest in sharing books with their kids. One said dismissively, “Oh if she wants a book she can go to her school library”. Another told me since we lost our bookstore, it never occurred to her to buy books as gifts. Have parents forgotten it is their job to foster a love of books in their children?

I can’t blame some of the parents. Without a bookstore it is hard to figure out what a child would like. Hell, sometimes it’s hard for me to figure out what’s out there, and I make a point of trying. Yes the Internet if full of recommendations, yet with all the noise it’s hard to find something worth reading. I miss the quiet bookstore aisle in which one can get lost for hours. Picking up a book beats reading an Amazon review hands down. Having a knowledgeable bookstore clerk was a gift. Don’t know what t read? Ask a live person for a recommendation. Chances are you’d walk out with three new titles.

Once it was so easy to think, “I’ll just pop into the store to see what’s new”. Now we have to sift through reviews, click bait, and scroll through pages just to find a book. Who, besides avid readers has time for this? No wonder parents have forgotten all about books. For many, not only are bookstores gone, so is the desire to read. And this, it seems is being past down to our children. No wonder they turn to other avenues of entertainment. To the kids, there is no other choice.

None of this proves the decline of bookstores is the true reason teens are not reading like they used to. But given that more and more parents are forgetting about books, it certainly is a contributing factor.

Decline in Reading in the US http://connection.ebscohost.com/literature/literacy/decline-reading-us

Why aren’t teens reading like they used to? http://www.npr.org/2014/05/12/311111701/why-arent-teens-reading-like-they-used-to

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