So, I pose the question why do we love books?
Could it be that feeling of anticipation as you open the cover of a book for the first time to see what lies within?
Is it the characters you meet in the book? Characters can help the reader learn about life, the world around them and how these characters work through their problems.
As the reader learns more about the characters, they also learn about themselves. The characters each offer another person’s perspective - what they are going through, their thoughts, their emotions, their advice, how people in the world react to their circumstances and experiences.
Readers can bring all that they learn from these characters back to the world in which they live. The characters found in books are like friends waiting any time we want them - just open a book to find them.
Book Week was established in 1954 by the Children’s Book Council of Australia (CBCA) and presents annual awards to books of literary merit for outstanding contribution to Australian children’s literature. The Australian Book Council encourages us to think about why we love books when it chooses a theme which becomes central to Book Week celebrations. The Council selects this theme to encourage readers to think about, search for, and find books that fit the theme. This year, we celebrate Old Worlds, New Worlds, Other Worlds.
This theme reminds us that books can take us on journeys to unknown places, different worlds, and different times. Books take you into people’s homes and even into people’s hearts. All that people have ever thought, experienced, or dreamed lies waiting to be discovered in a book.
Books transport the reader to imaginary places that can bring so much joy. Mostly, you can escape with books and go everywhere. Renowned children’s author, Roald Dahl, shares the power of the book with the main character in one of his most famous novels - Matilda. ‘The book transported her into new worlds and introduced her to crazy people who lived exciting lives. She travelled all over the world while sitting in her little room in an English village.’
Thank you to everyone who contributed to Book Week celebrations - families for creating such amazing costumes and for being an appreciative audience, staff for getting into the spirit of the Week, Annette Box for her organisation of the event and Stephanie Gillan for creating three worlds in the library.
Angela Drysdale