It’s funny what happens to your reading habits once you make them
public. I started out blogging right after graduating from library
school, and right before beginning my first professional position. I
was wildly enthusiastic about teen literature and constantly feeling
that teens didn’t get proper attention in libraries—but I had no outlet
for my enthusiasm other than my
mother
(a school librarian) and the friends I had made at the library system
at which I was a paraprofessional. Knowing that I was leaving the
people I talked to books about, I wanted to be able to continue that
dialog. So, I started a blog. I didn’t do it methodically. I wasn’t a
blog reader. I didn’t know what people wrote about. I had no idea what
I was doing.
At first, I peppered the blog with events,
activities and happenings in my life unrelated to books—but my reading
habits were always the cornerstone of my blogging. Then, a curious
thing happened. People I didn’t know started reading my blog. People
with whom I shared an interest.
And then I started reading
more blogs. First the people who had commented on mine, then the ones
who made interesting comments on theirs. Then I sought them out.
Dialogs were created. I became influenced by what they were reading. I
joined in on memes. I volunteered for the
Cybils. I said yes when someone asked me to join in on one of those new-fangled blog tour things. Then
Reader Girlz
asked me to be a poster girl—someone who recommends books to them,
primarily to go along with their monthly featured author. Suddenly I
found myself with lists of books to read. What used to be happenstance
began to contain a certain level of obligation. And am I really a teen
librarian/blogger worth my salt if I haven’t read the latest books
buzzing around these communities?
I don’t want you to
interpret this as complaining. Through those commitments and through
that community I’ve found books that I might not have found. Books that
I adore. Books that I hate. Books I can’t get worked up to feel much of
anything about. But I do miss wandering the shelves on my own just
discovering
things. I don’t so much have time for that anymore. But without that
wandering, that discovering, I might not have found authors I treasure
today—Laurie Halse Anderson, Tamora Pierce, L.A. Meyer, Brett
Hartinger, John Flanagan, Justina Chen Headley, and so, so many others.
I read all of these authors because I just stumbled upon them while
shelving or checking books in or out, or simply browsing. I found them
merely by happenstance, without any premeditation, without anyone
telling me that I should read them or I had to read them or I needed to
vet them for this, that or someone else. I wonder what I’m missing
these days.
So what have I been reading lately? What do I plan on reading? However I found them, here’s what’s been on the menu lately:
Little Brother by Cory Doctorow
The Disreputable History of Frankie-Landau Banks by E. Lockhart
Violet on the Runway by Melissa Walker
Songs for a Teenage Nomad by Kim Culbertson
Life Sucks by Jessica Abel
Sovay by Celia Reese
Good Enough by Paula Yoo
What are you reading? What are you looking forward to? How has blogging or blogs affected your To Be Read pile?
Posted by: Jackie Parker