That wasn't my point - at least there reading automatically lowers the bar, and makes reading essentially books for 12 year olds the standard of literacy. If we praise things that have no complexity inside them, or no depth, then ultimately, reading as a whole is degraded, and quite simply, if Twilight is the standard, then I hardly think reading is even worth saving. I assure you, few respect literary culture as much as I do - my adolescence, in effect, was essentially constructed out of it - but to degrade it so is just silly.
I have no problem giving help to those who struggle with reading - I myself struggle with reading daily, as I try and read texts in other languages, and, thanks to the help of friends, I slowly make progress. But since my literacy in Italian essentially means the only text I can read with ease is a cheap magazine, does that mean we should praise the cheap magazines because I am able to read them? I can't even read nursery rhymes in Chinese, should we scrap those?
Of course, reading is difficult, but there are plenty of texts, such as Housman's verse, which require minimal knowledge of the language to really appreciate - though, they often take a sort of willingness to be open minded on the part of the reader. But I don't quite see that in Twilight, in the sense that Mozart's music can often be very, very simple in its style, that any child can hum the tune, yet even then, I wouldn't consider a popsong by The Backstreet Boys to be an "at least they are listening to music".




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