This is the article I wrote for Dear Books, an online bookstore of children's books. I am their guest writer and reader. Two more articles will be posted in the blog. Swing by their site and do buy a copy of my books that are up for sale.
I am writing this in an age of bizarre conditions and
uncertainty.
Never in my life did I dream of living in and during a
pandemic. This is the stuff I only read in history books. The Balck Plague. The
Spanish Flu. Outbreaks of Cholera in the 1800s. These are global health
catastrophes that drastically and dramatically changed the way people lived.
Such phenomena shape the way people think, imagine and relate with each other.
Indeed, the COVID-19 contagion is transforming varied aspects of our lives.
We are paying more attention to keep ourselves healthy.
We grapple with strategies to cope and survive the isolation that comes with
lockdown and quarantine. We battle fake news and misinformation every day. We
come face to face with ethical and social issues that affect local, national
and global systems. From politics to education, trade and industry, science and
technology, this virus that is novel and new is bringing out the best and the worst
in us.
As an author and teacher librarian, I find myself
counting the possibilities and opportunities for growth, development and yes,
even nourishment that the COVID-19 pandemic brings. There is loss all around.
There is grief. But there is also healing. There are acts of kindness and compassion all around us. We
see this happening in many ways and in many forms. For one, there is an
explosion of stories, information and resources for learning. The variety of
reading materials available online spills over our social media feeds, email
inboxes and chat groups. Many of these reading materials are created with the
themes of the current times. Relevant as they are, we still need to select and
evaluate them carefully and responsibly.
This is why books -- and reading, are so dear to me.
They are all around us and it allows us to make choices.
Books either in print or electronic format are mirrors
we see ourselves in as well as the world we live in. The characters that
populate our favorite story books and novels become our friends. We admire
authors and in our eyes, they are rockstars. In some stroke of magic, we know
that we are not alone. In books and reading, we are never in isolation. So let
us turn to stories, to books and to reading in these bizarre and uncertain
times.
Tell a story. Pick up a book. Read. Discover new things.
Spark your curiosity. And if books and reading stirred you to write your own
story, just go and do it. I assure you these things will see us through a
raging pandemic.
No comments:
Post a Comment