:lol: It has been known to happen on occasion. I am equipped with a top of head like everyone else. ;)
Yes, I don't think you're wrong about the need to limit the access young people have to a certain kind of book, but a full on ratings system would be rather complicated and daunting as a task.Quote:
...but point taken. I'm just aware of what's possible to buy, and I was thinking of a particular type of book. Perhaps you're right, and those sorts are easy to spot. On reflection, perhaps there are too many to comprehensively rate, and, as someone has said, there is a kind of rating with the distiction between, child teen and adult books.
I agree fully with Neely on this point. I can't see the sense in a ratings system based on how challenging a book is at all. A person will either put a book down because it's too challenging, and possibly come back to it later, or maybe wrestle a little with a book that's a little beyond them stylistically speaking and learn and expand from the struggle. Not to mention, once you get a ratings system going there's going to be competition and branding among children. Kids who aren't up to reading the things they are supposed to be reading for their age could be teased for being "stupid" and kids reading ahead of their age could be labelled as (might even be susceptible to becoming) rather arrogant. Much better to just encourage kids (and adults) to take pleasure in whatever level of challenge suits them best.
Oh, I love that feeling of reading something and loving it without really understanding why. Probably half the reason I'm so drawn to poetry. Your insight does suggest one of the great things about reading, which is the way we can grow into and out of certain books or different aspects of books, the way revisiting a really good work of literature can help us reflect upon the changes within ourselves. My grandmother, who lived into her late 80's, used to tell me about the experience of reading Dickens' Great Expectations multiple times in the course of her life from the age of about 16 to the final time at 85 or so. About every ten years she found herself picking it up again, and she said that each time it was like reading a new book, because there was so much that she hadn't understood or noticed before because of the way she had developed as a reader/appreciator of the literary aspects and because of the life experiences she had been through that gave her new insight into/appreciation for certain characters. One of the great reasons for reading things we don't entirely understand when we're young is that it gives us a wonderful marker for reflection back to that time if we revisit the same work later in life. And, as you say, it is always a work in progress. :nod:[/QUOTE]
Perfectly understandable. :)Quote:
I seem to have come round to the opposite view, but then I still wouldn't have liked my kids to read the stuff I did. Torn parent syndrome.

