There
are taught and self-taught methods for learning, depending on a
person's desire to explore. Sometimes I imagine being brought up with
the internet. Exploring. Rather than a library of books, there are
myriads. As a child, I went from authors to genres in my search, fairytale, animal novels, magic, and finally mystery. Few juvenile
books are made into movies. I'm sure audiobooks would attract a
younger me like islands viewed from land.
So
I released my first audiobook, TheWide Awake Loons, narrated by Aven Shore. Promo codes for the free book can be
requested at Message on its Facebook page.
One
thing I learned from memorizing Peter Rabbit so that I could
point at each word was that my four older siblings and my parents
weren't all that interested in picture books. The advice for
relationships is to find joint interests. Pictures with headlines
came daily in the newspaper and weekly in Look, Life,
and Time magazines. Sitting next to someone on the couch, I
picked up words like flood, ice cream, or win
and won accompanying pictures of local basketball stars.
Drawn
on as a reader, I was eventually forbidden to use my allowance money
on comic books, Superman and Archie bought at the
Piggly Wiggly supermarket. No more tilting graphics. What if there
had been audiobooks to give a children's novel more sensation?
Reading and watching movies don't go together. Reading along with an
audiobook would feel like a shared experience and give a sense of
involvement.
A
reading specialist explained findings in a Scholastic article “Why
Audiobooks Are Great for Kids”:
“She’ll
be able to delve deeper into complicated topics and listen to
better-quality books than she might find at her own level. That
exposure strengthens comprehension skills, particularly for
children who have reading difficulties, says [Mary Beth] Crosby
Carroll [reading specialist].”
Here
are statistics from a The Booklist Reader article, “New
Research Shows Audiobooks Have Powerful Impact on Literacy
Development”:
Listening
to audiobooks:
• Increases reading accuracy by 52%
• Improves comprehension by 76%
• Increases recall 40% when combined with print materials (vs. print alone)
• Increases reading accuracy by 52%
• Improves comprehension by 76%
• Increases recall 40% when combined with print materials (vs. print alone)
The
first audiobook I heard was in a set of Tolkien, found at a book
sale. That was wonderful since I read all of his fantasy series. And
I actually preferred the audiobooks to some of the movie material.
Ever
since the VHS movies became available, I have found
that I can switch from books to another medium as easily as anyone.
I've realized that story is all for me. However I continue as a used
book dealer to explore and buy books that are new to me, even when
they are decades old.
Audio
is sometimes silent hearing so it is a part of reading. I hadn't
expected to read the ancient historian Herodotus until I was savoring
a voice with the rare quality of Socrates in Plato's Republic. Then I wanted to find out
how Herodotus achieved his travels north to Thrace, east to Persia, and south down the Nile
in a dangerous time. At Google Books I found an “imaginary
biography”, written in the 1850's. I hadn't planned to read much
of that either but once I got started with the author James Talboys
Wheeler, I couldn't put it down. Scenes with dialogue and description
enhanced the ancient world. That happens when exploring. Subject is land where, if a person disembarks, they might stay awhile. How much
better to experience it in more than one dimension.
My
new cat Irene, a Maine coon mix, was a rescue from the North Woods resort region. This winter she is ten months and responding to
“Wild Sounds of the Northwoods” by Lang Elliott and Ted Mack. As
if this tape was made to be a cat audiobook. Cats are among the
greatest of animal explorers!
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