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Family & Education

The lion, the witch and the Torah

Children's books get read again and again, says Susan Reuben

August 16, 2018 11:23
(Photo: Getty images)
3 min read

I spent my entire childhood re-reading books. I’m not sure at what point I ever read a book for the first time, because my principal memory is of re-reading them again and again and again.

Now, as an adult, I rarely re-read anything. There’s so little time and so many new books to explore. And yet it’s a shame because, with a really great book, the experience of reading it gets richer and more pleasurable every single time. There’s the luxury of revisiting the passages you love, combined with the discovery of details and nuances you’d missed the first, or second, or third time.

Now that I have my own kids, I get to enjoy an entirely different type of re-reading by sharing my favourite children’s books with them. I recently felt a delicious shiver of anticipation as I opened The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe and read to my six-year-old the words, “Once there were four children whose names were Peter, Susan, Edmund and Lucy.” How wonderful to be able to see that story through the eyes of someone who has absolutely no idea what is going to happen after Lucy steps into the wardrobe.

And then there’s Harry Potter. My husband and I were so desperate be the one to introduce our kids to the Harry Potter series that we agreed to do so in strict rotation. I read the first book to our oldest the moment he turned seven (the optimum age, we decided, to appreciate it for the first time).