Los Angeles Times

Give the gift of reading

- Send email to askamy@amydickins­on.com.

Dear Readers: This is a special day for me, because this is the day I take a break from hosting your questionst­o advocate for a cause that is dear to me: literacy.

In my long career as a writer and reader, I have volunteere­d in classrooms, libraries and prisons, reading with others and sharing the work of writers important in my own life. I do so in honor of my late mother, Jane, who passed along to me her own love of reading and writing. This is a legacy I continue to happily share — through the many books I recommend in this space, and also the two memoirs I have authored.

What I learned from my mother’s life-lesson is that when you have a book, you are never alone. Reading unlocks worlds of imaginatio­n and creativity. Literacy imparts real power, and this is especially important for people who feel powerless.

The magic of literacy can happen at any time, but it is especially important in childhood. Reading helps a young child’s brain develop and mature. Reading for pleasure is a lifelong gift of entertainm­ent and learning.

Today, in memory of my mother on her birthday, I joyfully share a simple idea that adults can easily adopt in order to give the children in their lives the gift my mother gave to me, by putting “A Book on Every Bed.”

Here’s what to do: On Christmas morning (or whatever holiday you celebrate), make sure that each child in your household wakes up to a wrapped book at the foot of their bed. The gift could be a new book or an old favorite from your own childhood.

After the child unwraps the book, the most important aspect of this gift is unveiled, when the parent sits and shares it with the child. The sad fact is that more than a third of families in the United States do not regularly share books with their young children. Starting a celebratio­n morning by reading together will forge an unforgetta­ble intimacy for both the child and the parent.

This year I am partnering with Children’s Reading Connection, a new national early literacy initiative founded in my hometown of Ithaca, N.Y. Their advocacy focuses on the importance of helping families to share books with babies and children. Even babies too young to talk with tune in, in a deep and abiding way, when they are held and read to.

This is an important prescripti­on for health and success in growing brains, and sharing a book is a wonderful way for families to connect. Every year I hear from teachers, librarians, parents and grandparen­ts who tell me they have adopted the “book on every bed” tradition in their homes. I can think of no nicer way to kick off a busy Christmas morning than by snuggling up with a book before opening other gifts.

Parents and caregivers can put a book on every bed in their own households; you can also help to spread the cause of literacy by generously sharing this idea in your own community. For families who celebrate through service projects, I suggest adopting a local classroom or daycare center and providing a book for each child to unwrap on Christmas morning.

To learn more, and to watch an “instructio­nal” video of me demonstrat­ing this concept, go to childrens readingcon­nection.org or my Facebook page: face book.com/ADickinson Daily.

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