Babble

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Baby Squared

My Bookish Babe

I have always been a bibliophile. Not only do I enjoy reading books, I enjoy looking at and holding and smelling them. If it were socially acceptable, I would probably lick them. When I was a kid, I used to build little dens and forts in closets and nooks for the express purpose of crawling inside and reading. When we got a clubhouse for our backyard and started a club for neighborhood kids, the first thing I did -- after appointing myself president and writing the club handbook and anthem, naturally -- was set up a lending library. A long-held dream of mine is to one day have an office with floor-to-ceiling bookshelves and one of those sliding ladder thingies. And given the choice between going to a movie, watching TV or curling up in a comfy chair with a good book -- well, you get the point.

 

So, how psyched am I that Clio is suddenly obsessed with books? Quite! She is constantly thrusting them at me, demanding that I read them to her, eager to point out everything that she recognizes. If she sees a bird or butterfly, she'll do the fluttering hands sign for butterfly. An elephant gets our own made-up sign for elephant: arm as trunk, and a sort of trumpeting sound. Horses get bronx cheers (close enough), and cows get "mmm."  Mouths (ma), eyes (ah), shoes (shz), cats (ba), fish (shh) and babies (dieh dieh) also get mentions. If she doesn't know the word, sign, or sound for something and wants to know, she'll point at it and say "da da!" and I'll tell her. It's like she suddenly *gets* this notion of words being connected to things, and is desperate to learn them all.

 

I've always read to the girls before bed, once they're in their cribs. Lately, Clio has been demanding to have her own book, too. The only trouble is, she's very picky. She reaches out toward the bookshelves making that terrible grunting "I need!" sound that toddlers (mine, anyway) are wont to do (ieeeh! ieeeh! ieehh!) and I bring her book after book. She pushes them away, one after another, until I hit on the right thing: The Very Hungry Caterpillar? No, no, too predictable. Noah's Ark? Religious propaganda! Hop on Pop? Don't insult me. Touch and Feel Farm Animals? Touch and feel this!

 

Eventually, something will strike the right chord. The Rainbow Fish? Hmm....yes, that looks interesting. Let me read the back cover blurbs and the author bio. Hm. Yes, all right. I'll give it a try. If The Guardian liked it, I suppose it can't be too bad... And then she'll plop down on her butt in her crib and read, sometimes with the book right-side up, sometimes not. For the past week, I've left her with a book in her crib to fall asleep with after saying good night. (And several times I've had to go in an hour later and remove said book because she is lying on it, uncomfortable and crying.)

 

Alastair thinks I'm being too accomodating by bringing her all these books until she finds one she likes. He suggested I just offer her two or three and let her choose one.  Yeah. Well. I tried that tonight, and she handily, annoyedly rejected them all and resumed grunting and reaching (ieeh! ieeh! ieeh!) until I brought more. A book from the second round, Baby Kittens, held her attention for a while, but then when I attempted to read some nice, imperialist poems aloud from A Child's Garden of Verses while she looked at her kittensClio decided that that was the book she had to have. So I scooped both her and Elsa out of their cribs, held them in my lap (something they're very into lately, to my extreme delight) and started reading them "My bed is a boat." I got about three iambic pentametric lines into it before Clio was crawling across the room looking for something with more farm animals in it.

 

I don't blame her -- in fact, I commend her -- for being picky. I'm the same way; when I'm looking for a new book to read, I'll often flip through a bunch of them before I hit on one that feels right. And it doesn't always work out. I don't feel compelled to finish books just for the sake of finishing them anymore. There are too many great books out there, and too little time. 

 

I love that Clio wants to read, but not just any old thing. She's a nerd after my own heart.

 


Comments

 

steffmarcusky said:

At what age to the usually get into books. I love books, and we must have 50 for him, but at 10 months, he just doesn't have the patience to sit and look at any of them for very long. And I don't have patience for books without plots. but still, I sit with the books of pictures and try to get him interested, but no go.

April 16, 2008 8:34 PM
 

Susie Felber said:

Supah sweet!  Also, I hereby vote for more posts with "Robert Louis Stevenson" as a tag. :)  Also, my babe likes any book with a car or a bus in it.  I fear he really is a boy...

April 17, 2008 12:18 AM
 

lex said:

i love this!  i, too, would probably lick books, given the chance.  i've been reading to my little guy since, well, before he was born, and we read ALL the time.  he's just started getting picky, too.  it's so cute to watch their little minds at work.

and "too many books...too little time"?  one of my life's great heartbreaks.  but i can keep trying to read them all, and i will.

April 17, 2008 8:31 AM
 

Stephanie said:

When I was in my MFA program, I had a strange "moment" with one of my workshop professors because he found it odd that I was holding this one book, Ian Hamilton's SIXTY POEMS, a bit too...long...and I was feeling the covers in my hands (they were velvety-feeling matte finish nice nice paperback with good card stock...and the cover was very simple and aesthetically pleasing...so sue me!!!).  I, too, love books, and can't do anything without the "security blanket" of having a book in my vicinity (though when I was a kid I have a distinct memory of one day at the edge of my parents' bed and my mom telling me that I was supposed to go and have quiet time and read a book and I kept on saying NO!).

Yay for Clio for getting into the book thing.  And wanting to fall asleep with books next to her in bed?  Um, I'm 31 and I sort of do that.  If I am in the middle of a really juicy book, sometimes it's like having a pajama party with the characters inbetween the covers.  For real.

And if Clio ever needs a babysitter who lives in medford (at least before I move to the midwest on 1 August) who will read to her and read with her, just holler my way.  I'm close by.

April 17, 2008 9:21 AM
 

knockedup said:

Axel licks books all the time.  I guess that's not really OK once you're past the age of one, though...

I'm so glad Clio is particular.  I'm a reading slut myself.  I have my favorites, but I'll read pretty much anything that's lying around.  I have found myself reading a credit card application brochure in Spanish before.  Obviously, that was a great use of time.

April 17, 2008 3:08 PM
 

chyna823 said:

Ugh--I hate the Rainbow Fish. It starts out seeming like a fable about the evils of vanity, but in the end, the fish has to give up what makes him unique so those assh-le fish will be his friends. Yuck.

April 17, 2008 3:21 PM
 

mombo said:

My 15-month-old is obsessed with books. Obsessed. He reads in the car, on the changing table, in his high chair (when we let him)...plus whenever he's playing and is reminded that his mound of books exists, he'll bring one over to us. These days he is NUTS about the Knuffle Bunny books and anything with tons of pictures on each page (concept books, I guess they're called).

Glad to hear mine isn't the only bibliophile!

April 17, 2008 4:17 PM
 

Tracey said:

Another booknerd here. So much so in fact, that in high school I used to hang out in the local library for FUN or when I needed to get away. (this is still one of my favorite things to do when I need to hide for awhile) I also fantasize about a library with built in shelves floor to ceiling and rolling ladder.

Anyway, Cade is just like your girls these days. Charlie and Lola flip-up books for the changing table, Curious George, (monk-monk!), Dr Seuss, Goodnight Moon and the daily mail. It doesn't much matter, as long sa he can flip pages and find new things. All I know is that at the age of 20 months he has a TON of books and they do get attention. We couldn't be happier about it.    

April 17, 2008 8:38 PM
 

Cathy Carey said:

Oh, books.  I LOVE books.  My to read stack grows every time I visit Costco.  And I my hubby and I share your vision of wall to ceiling bookshelves with the rolling ladder. I also agree with your philosophy of not finishing bad books.  Life is to short to waste on bad books and bad wine.

When I was growing up my parent's ultimate punishment was to take my books away.  

April 17, 2008 10:10 PM
 

Gwen said:

Oh, yet another way that I love you. :) I was trying to explain to my husband recently why ebooks would never work for me. That I love the feel of the paper, the smell of the book. I am a book addict, I confess. We're building a new house, and my fave fave thing about it is that I'm getting a library!! Not big enough for a rolling ladder yet, but there are floor to ceiling bookshelves. I am so psyched. My 11 month old girls are just starting to get books. I love it, it's probably the number one thing I've been concerned about...what if they don't like BOOKS? (the horror...)

April 18, 2008 12:38 PM
 

Alastair said:

Chyna, I agree. The Rainbow Fish has a warped message. Surely, a fish can learn how to play nicely without giving away all its scales.

April 20, 2008 6:24 PM
 

Roper said:

I agree about 'Rainbow Fish' too, Chyna. There's something vaguely communist-totalitarian about the message. (Nobody shall have extra-special beauty! True beauty is solidarity with your comrades! Give away your scales, you elitist, bourgeois fish!)

Baby, where did we get that book, anyway? Can we compost it?

April 20, 2008 9:32 PM

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About Roper

I'm an advertising copywriter, wannabe novelist, mother of twins, musician's wife, bleeding heart and wiseass.

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Jane Roper

Jane Roper in Boston

One baby? Piece of cake. Try two. This working mother gives you the inside scoop on the ultimate in extreme parenting: twins.

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