Hubris

Curled Up by Love: Reading to Children

Skip the B.S.

by Skip Eisiminger

“Dear Madam: Will you please let this nigger boy have some books by H.L. Mencken?”—Note forged by Richard Wright

“Thanks to my books/for their incandescence/that saved me from/my adolescence.”—The Wordspinner

CLEMSON South Carolina—(Weekly Hubris)—7/18/11—Judging from the pictures, I was about five when my grandfather said that his idol Rogers Hornsby had never read a book,and that was the main reason he hit .358 over 23 years in the majors. Apparently, my father didn’t think much of his father’s eye-strain argument because I have two photographs of him reading the Sunday comics to me on the porch of my grandfather’s home.

I was fortunate that my parents read to me before I could read for myself, so I have forwarded their gift into the foggy future by reading to our children and grandchildren. I’m happy to report that my efforts and the work of several others appear to be bearing fruit: three of our grandchildren are fine readers, and the fourth soon will be. I always expected that our daughter and daughter-in-law would read to their children, but our son and son-in-law also appreciate that there is no cheaper or wiser investment.

Brook Frasier, the author's son-in-law, reading to daughter Lena
Brook Frasier, the author's son-in-law, reading to daughter Lena

The male stereotype, judging mostly by New Yorker cartoons over the last 40 years, is for the father, if he reads at all to his children, to be a reluctant reader. In one cartoon, a father watching television tells his pajama-clad daughter holding a book, “A story? Honey, wouldn’t you rather a mild sedative?” Another child sitting in bed finds it necessary to remind his father that reading a story requires reading aloud. One rare patriarch actually shoulders his responsibility and reads “Billy Pig’s Picnic” to an unseen child. Standing in a corner of a book store, this father reads into his cell phone. Though it’s a novel form of piracy, I suppose that “distance-learning” beats no story at all.

The children of either gender in these bedtime cartoons are an alien breed. One budding gangster tells his grandmother, seated beside the bed with a book in her hand, “I’ll listen for a dollar.”

Another kid raises the ante, telling his father, “Mommy usually reads me a story, then slips me a twenty.” Often, the child is a confederate of the mother, as when one girl whispers past her father, whose book has slipped to the floor, “I think he’s finally asleep.” One thing is certain: children are more comfortable with the technology than their elders. In one panel, a child is happily listening to “Peter Pan” on her iPod while her grandfather reads the Times.

I realize that cartoons aren’t a blood-pressure cuff on the arm of civilization, but I also know how hard many have fought for the right to read whatever they wish. In my lifetime, it once was against South Carolina state law for the Pickens County Bookmobile to stop in Black neighborhoods. In the same county where John C. Calhoun once blustered, “Show me a [Negro] who can . . .  parse a Greek verb, and I’ll admit he’s a human being,” the Bookmobile wouldn’t even slow down.

Just a county away, Jesse Jackson was denied entrance to the Greenville County Public Library when he was a senior in high school working on a term paper. And a few counties to the east, future astronaut Ronald McNair was forbidden to use a library that his African-American family had helped to build with their tax dollars.

Astronaut Ronald Ervin McNair
Astronaut Ronald Ervin McNair

In 2008, the novelist Dave Eggers told a Clemson audience about orphans in Ethiopia being taught to read and write in a boys’ “school” without desks, books, paper, or pencils. The students, when they write at all, write in the dirt with an index finger. If their letters are not well formed, their teacher often pushes their “pen” into the clay so hard the nails crack. A few Clemson athletes were in the audience the night Eggers spoke, and I hope they understood his message. I mention them because many enjoy full scholarships, and yet they often resell their texts with the shrink-wrap unbroken.

But isn’t having books you never read like leaving all the lights on while you sleep?

A colleague of mine was in the USC-Sumter Registrar’s Office a few years ago, when a young Black man brought an application for graduate school to the counter. After a few questions, it was clear that the sheepish applicant could neither read nor write. The Sumter Registrar then called his counterpart at Morris College and asked if the applicant was one of their graduates as he‘d claimed.

“Oh, yes,” the Morris administrator assured him after checking the records. “He was one of our non-reading graduates.” I have several responses to this disturbing tale, but I shall leave it at this: it’s likely this poor fellow was a victim of a family that never read to him.

Unfortunately, not every child has a mother like the pediatric neurosurgeon, Dr. Benjamin Carson. Although Carson’s mother was illiterate, she insisted her son read to her every day because she understood the importance of what she’d been denied, namely that:

The sword’s in a book,

not buried in stone.

Until it is freed,

you can’t take the throne.

In another crotchet of mine called “The Shape of Love” (for Brook), I write:

A man with a small girl

Reading “one more story”

is a sunflower curled

by a morning glory.

A parent who cannot afford 15 minutes a day to be curled by the demands of his child is a man too busy to be a father. If parents spend any time at home, they have time to tell a story even if they cannot read one. There’s just no excuse.

Don’t have a story? Then borrow one of mine: Once upon a time, Mrs. Henny Penny went to a library and said to the librarian, “Buk!” After presenting her library card, the hen left with her book properly stamped. The next day, she returned and said, “Buk, buk!” Soon, Mrs. Penny checked out with two books and returned the following day, saying, “Buk, buk, buk!” Curious, the librarian followed the hen home. “Can she really read two books,” he wondered, “in a day?” Standing at the open window of the hen’s coop, he saw her place each of the books before a frog. To her adopted offspring, she said, “Read it, read it, read it!”

And that is how the frog came to speech.

Take it from Mrs. Penny; she knows a thing or two: the frog grew up to be a neurosurgeon.

Dr. Sterling (“Skip”) Eisiminger was born in Washington DC in 1941. The son of an Army officer, he traveled widely but often reluctantly with his family in the United States and Europe. After finishing a master’s degree at Auburn and taking a job at Clemson University in 1968, he promised himself that he would put down some deep roots. These roots now reach back through fifty years of Carolina clay. In 1974, Eisiminger received a Ph.D. from the University of South Carolina, where poet James Dickey “guided” his creative dissertation. His publications include Non-Prescription Medicine (poems), The Pleasures of Language: From Acropox to Word Clay (essays), Omi and the Christmas Candles (a children’s book), and Wordspinner (word games). He is married to the former Ingrid (“Omi”) Barmwater, a native of Germany, and is the proud father of a son, Shane, a daughter, Anja, and grandfather to four grandchildren, Edgar, Sterling, Spencer, and Lena. (Author Head Shot Augment: René Laanen.)

10 Comments

  • Wayne Mergler

    Well, Skip, of course I agree with everything you say here! You are absolutely right. Unfortunately, none of this ever quite worked for me. As a child, I hated to be read to. My father tried, I vaguely recall, though he would always read things to me like the “introduction” or the “foreword” of any book and that, deadly as you can imagine, was the kiss of death for my being an attentive audience. When I learned to read in first grade, I would snatch at the book he held and say: “Let ME do it! I want to do it myself!” And so my father, understandably, gave up.

    Well, as they say, karma is a bitch — and my own children paid me back dearly. I tried valiantly to read to them — and to read to them all the best of children’s literature. And I have enough of a theater/drama background that I think I was even pretty good at it. But they were not interested. Joanna, my eldest, would sit politely, trying not to yawn as I read. Her sister Heather, less polite, would squirm and fidget in my lap and say: “Are we almost at the end, Daddy?” My son Seth, always characteristic, would simply get up and leave the room in the middle of my dramatic reading. So, alas, though I tried, tried, tried to be a SNAG dad (sensitive new age dad, full of intent to read aloud and often), I was a failure.

    By the way, I love, love, LOVE your little poem about the sword in the stone. Brilliant! Wayne

  • Dirgster

    Why did you find it necessary to add a photo of astronaut McNair to the blog while other people mentioned where not pictured?

  • Skip Eisiminger

    Wayne, I guess it all comes down to the luck of the draw–Anja and Shane were thirsty vessels eager to be filled with everything from Winnie the Pooh to Robin Hood, and all four of our grandchildren have enjoyed being read to as well. But once they learn to read, I just ask them to entertain me.
    Spencer, an avid fan of Harry Potter, tickled us recently–I was doing a crossword and had managed to work out the down clue “Hogwart’s tree” as “Wailing Willow.” Certain I was right because everything made sense going across, I thought I’d ask Spencer. He just laughed and said, “It’s ‘Whomping Willow,’ Gramps.” We went on-line, and damn if he wasn’t right–Thomas Joseph, the crossword puzzle maker, had gotten it wrong, and the net was buzzing with his mistake. There must be a thousand details like this in the Potter books.
    Thanks for your kind words, Skippa

  • eboleman-herring

    @ Dirgster from WH’s Publishing-Editor: Well, because the author of this excellent piece AND his editor are both Upstate South Carolinians–which is where the “action” of the column is set–and so is the late Ronald McNair. I suppose I could have put in a gravure of Calhoun or a photo of Dr. Carson, but I liked McNair’s face, and he’s no longer with us on the planet. Nuff said? Why in the world do you ask, by the way? Elizabeth Boleman-Herring

  • Anja Fraiser

    Who is that beautiful redhead in the photo?!

    Thank you, Dad. For the love of reading you passed along and for including us in your poetry! We love you.

  • Skip Eisiminger

    Anja, That’s Lena-Boo, of course, being read “one more story” by Father Fritz.
    Sorry I failed to acknowledge that you took that charming photo, not Omi.
    Theo

  • Skip Eisiminger

    Sage, How did you alone manage to get your name up in blue?
    Thinking of you, Dein lieber Bruder

  • Janet Granuzzo

    Thank you Skip for sharing your experiences. Not everyone is going to have the same experiences you did for a various amount of reasons. I agree 100% with the point you are trying to make and am happy for your family that you had such good luck. My kids would sit still sometimes and not others or want to read themselves for control others. I believe there is always a time to read with them – praying, the newspaper. Things don’t sink in right away, I learned. I thought I was a failure because I couldn’t get my kids to read with me often. However, my daughter is now 16 yr old and has a huge bookcase full of books because she now LOVES to read. I really appreciate what you say and hope many people read it too.

  • Skip Eisiminger

    Thanks, Janet for your sweet words–I’m happy for you and your daughter that both of you are readers. You mentioned the newspaper, and I’d just like to say that reading the comics (best 2-3 of the day?) is a great way to start a conversation with kids at the breakfast or dinner table. Finally, the last thing I read to my Mother in the hospital was a Baby Blues strip. I’ll never forget her smile.