Saturday 25 May 2019

The Books That Made Me Fall In Love With Words by Emma Pass

My mum and dad tell me that when I was very young, I used to come into their room into the small hours of the morning to announce I was bored. So they did what any self-respecting parents driven half-crazy by middle-of-the-night demands for entertainment would do: they taught me to read.

I don’t remember this; for me, reading’s something that’s always been there, like breathing. What I do remember is the books that were more than just books – the ones that made me fall in love with words. (Follow the links to find out more!)

Tim and the Hidden People (series) by Sheila K. McCullagh

I discovered these at school when I was about 5 or 6. While everyone else was listening to the teacher reading about Roger Red Hat (another series by Sheila McCullagh) I’d sneak these off the shelves to catch up with the adventures of Tim, a boy who finds a hidden kingdom and explores it with the help of a cat called Tobias. Often, I’d get so absorbed, I’d be completely unaware that the teacher had stopped reading and was giving me the Stare of Death™ until she came over and took the book out of my hands.

Black Harvest by Ann Pilling

By the time I got to middle school, I’d developed an appetite for ghost stories. One of my favourites was this dark and incredibly creepy book about Colin and Prill, who are dismayed to find out their dorky cousin Oliver is coming with them on a much-anticipated holiday to Ireland. When they get there, though, Oliver turns out to be the least of their worries. Strange things start to happen – a terrible smell hangs in the air, Prill is haunted by nightmares and their baby sister falls ill. In the end it’s Oliver, the only one who seems unaffected, who discovers a connection to the Great Famine and must fight to save them all. I remember this being the first book I ever read where, instead of seeing places I already knew in the real world, I saw places that were completely out of my own imagination, conjured up entirely by the words.

You’re Thinking About Doughnuts by Michael Rosen

I also loved funny books, and there’s few authors funnier than Michael Rosen. This book is about Frank, who has to wait at the museum one night while his mum, who’s the cleaner there, finishes her shift. The exhibits, which include a talking doughnut-obsessed skeleton, come to life and together, they have all sorts of adventures. I got it through a book club at school and read it until it dropped to pieces.

In honour of the great man himself, I’m going to leave you with a video of another of my all-time Rosen favourites – his poem Chocolate Cake. The only word for it is… genius.




What about you? Which books, stories and poems made you fall in love with words and reading?

4 comments:

Susan Price said...

Lovely blog! Why do teachers do that? -- Take a book away from someone who's enjoying it just because it's not the same one she's reading?

I loved the Jungle Books and Just So Stories -- I still find their cadences creeping into my writing. 'The Road Through The Woods' although that's from one of the Pook books. And the rhythms and patterns of folk stories.

Emma Pass said...

Thank you, Susan!

Ann Turnbull said...

Winnie the Pooh; Peter Pan and Wendy; the Jungle Books; The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe. Loads of others too, but those were the ones I loved the most and read over and over again.

Anne Booth said...

Lovely post! I think The Narnia books, and also 'The Land of Green Ginger' by Noel Langley and the Paddington Stories by Michael Bond because they made me laugh so much and made me realise words could do that, and 'Carbonel' by Barbara Sleigh because the heroine, Rosemary, like me, came from a family where there was very little money, and yet still had a magical adventure.