Tuesday, July 12, 2016

My Rights as a Reader!

“You can’t make someone read. Just like you can’t make them fall in love, or dream.”

Books about books are my favorite type of books! You will know this if you go here and here. I have just finished Daniel Pennac’s delightful book ‘The Rights of the Reader’ and am so mad at myself for letting it remain in my TBR pile for years. A gift for having won a book blog contest hosted by a friend some six years ago, it has lain quietly on my bedside table waiting its turn.
I thank ‘whatever’ it was that made me finally pick it up as my lament for lost time will now be confined to these six years.


In a friendly and warm conversational tone, Pennac invites us to explore our love for reading and why for some of us it dies an early death. First and foremost, reading is a choice. While some of us regard it as sustenance for the soul, there are many who can do without reading and not feel they are missing a thing. I may fall into the former category but I have plenty of very special friends who fall in the latter and their being non-readers doesn’t make me like them any less. Just as finding me with my nose in a book, almost all the time, doesn’t make me any less acceptable to them.

In his absolutely adorable book, Pennac defends the simple act of reading for pleasure. Reading not because we have to, but because we want to. Each chapter rings a bell and I recognised so many truths that we bury as we grow up and start reading more for a purpose than for the sheer joy of it. Interspersed with quirky and fun illustrations by Quentin Blake, flipping the pages of this book is unadulterated enjoyment and at the same time evokes meaningful introspection.


And, let’s not forget Pennac’s greatest gift of all- The Rights of The Reader.


Source: Pinterest


Here are My Rights as a Reader:

1.       The Right Not to Read
Reading doesn’t have to become a daily habit. If I don’t feel like reading on a particular day, well I won’t. In fact, I have often swung between 24 hour reading marathons and absolute abstinence from books for at least 3 days. I read when I want and if I want.

2.       The Right to Skip
Just want to follow choice characters and not go through pages on pages of descriptions about places, food, weather, and clothes? Go ahead. No one is insisting that we read every page. I used to feel guilty about doing this when I was younger but with age my preferences have found their groove and if I find some bits of a novel boring I just jump to the part that excites me. Of course if I found large bits of a novel boring I would just dump it which brings me to my next right.

3.       The Right Not to Read a Book
At times I start a book with great anticipation and interest but as I go further into the story I just feel burdened. The connection I thought would be built seems to have fizzled out even before it can truly form. It’s time then to admit that the book was a mistake. However, I never regret these mistakes for it is only by exploring many many authors, and genres, and writing styles that I have been able to identify my preferences. Now that I know my taste, the chances of DNFing a book have also lessened.

4.       The Right to Read it Again
Loved a book? Want to read it again? Well, why not? Reading a favorite as many times as I want is a sure thing with me. For that matter, I couldn’t tell you how many times I have read Pride and Prejudice even if I wanted. I have simply lost count!

5.        The Right to Read Anything
You like reading purely escapist thrillers but would rather say you prefer literary fiction. Why pretend? There are many in this world who loved the ‘Twilight’ trilogy and devoured the ‘Fifty Shades of Grey’ trilogy even if you didn’t. They have the right to read what they want. The good part is so do you! While there are good novels and bad novels, forcing yourself to stay away from the bad novels is just going to lure you to the forbidden fruit. Alongside the burger, I take time to enjoy the Chef’s special. In time, I hope, I may just find myself completely off junk food. If not, I do like burgers quite a bit.

6.       The Right to Mistake a Book for Real Life
At times, I have over-identified with certain characters and their circumstances and felt a book was totally written for me. With passing years, this excitement of being swept away completely by a book has mellowed down and I look back with amused fondness at my infatuation for some book which I would not touch today with a barge pole. But reading it was fun then, and remembering those days is fun now.

7.       The Right to Read Anywhere
I read while commuting to work, in airport lounges, in flights, in trains, in cabs, while standing, while sitting, and at times when I lay down for a while. I can even remember finishing a Stephen King novel while climbing the stairs! I read wherever I want and whenever I want.

8.       The Right to Dip In
I enjoy picking up books randomly from my bookshelf and letting them open on any page. I may then read a sentence, or a paragraph or sometimes the entire page. Often enough, I have flipped pages only to whimsically stop at a certain page and just read what it says. If I am in the middle of a breathing-down-my-neck project deadline and do not have the time to drink a novel, I just sip on short stories or excerpts.

9.       The Right to Read Out Loud
As a child, I used to often read out loud and vary my tone taking on the voice of different characters as the story progressed. As an adult, I do not do this. Haven’t really wondered why or when I stopped. But I do appreciate that I have the right to feel the emotions the words convey and speak the words out loud as if the world of the book had come alive for me.

10.    The Right to Be Quiet
For some books that I read I find myself unable to or do not wish to explain, review, discuss, or opine. A story may affect me too strongly and while I may ‘feel’ the meaning I may not really ‘know’ the meaning of what I read. For example, I always feel the need to be quiet after I read any of Khalid Hosseini’s novels. And I have every right to keep my reasons for reading a book, and my feelings about the book to myself if I so wish.

 Have you exercised all your rights?

6 comments:

  1. I cannot describe in words how much I can identify with this post! I want to exercise all the rights that you have mentioned as a reader - and I couldn't have put them in better words :)

    I would like to add one more right though:

    The right to laugh and cry while reading a book -

    This, in my mind, is different from 'The Right to mistake a book for real life'. I want to have the freedom to laugh while reading a witty line in a book - without people around staring at me as if I'm a nut case :) This has happened so many times when I'm reading on the metro, not that I've cared enough to let go of the book :)
    Similarly, some lines in a book have inexplicably made me cry, even though someone else may think that they are not really that touching. I want to have the right to be touched by any line in a book which, for whatever obscure reason, makes me cry - without feeling self-conscious about it. Case in point: there's a particular line in "All Things Beautiful" by Cathy Maxwell which makes me cry every time I read it - I think it's one of the most profound descriptions of love I have ever read. Does it make others cry? I don't know and don't care :)

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    1. Am sure we have the freedom to add our rights to this list created by Daniel Pennac:), after all reading is an intensely personal experience. As Edmund Wilson says "No two persons ever read the same book". And I can so understand the feeling of a book taking a hold of one one whether through poetic writing, or plot, or humor, or the emotions it evokes.

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  2. By the way, I totally loved your description of reading anything anywhere - reading a Stephen King while climbing stairs!!! Ha-ha.

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    1. Like you, I was reading on my commute back home and had reached the concluding chapter so had to finish while I was climbing the stairs to my apartment:) One can't leave a Stephen King for the time it takes to climb a couple of floors and enter the house!

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  3. Guilty as can be, I have caught myself reading while walking home. These days I read on kindly on phone...so yeah it's pretty much anywhere.

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    1. Am glad I have a kindred spirit in you:) And you are right in that a smartphone and kindle have made it impossible to not continue reading just cos' one is not at home! Am always super happy to have access to my current content on both- for anywhere, anytime reading.

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