life is too short to read bad books
Feb. 28th, 2008 03:27 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Ask You a Question Month is drawing to a close. (In a few days, Ask Me a Question Month will be beginning. Stay tuned for details.) But it's not over yet! Has a book ever changed your life? If so, how? If not, what has?
ETA: Another interesting followup to the "Marry Him" article here.
ETA: Another interesting followup to the "Marry Him" article here.
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Date: 2008-03-06 03:11 am (UTC)But my mother thought that reading was good for children and that it was "educational," so she didn't censor my library reading. It was educational, all right, though not the way she meant. :-)
I didn't understand all of SIASL at 12, especially since I'd been so shielded from other realities, but I knew that there was something important in there that I needed to understand. I read it over and over again, two or three times a year all during my teens.
When I reread the book recently, after not having read it for awhile, I was surprised to see how much of my personality and thought processes are lifted directly from Heinlein. I owe that man my life.
From what I know about you, I think this story will sound a bit familiar, though the title of the book will be different. :-)
Have you read For Us, the Living, his unpublished first novel? He wrote it in 1939, and almost everything he would ever write was contained in that book in microcosm. It's wild to realize how much he knew about where he wanted his writing to go, nearly 50 years before To Sail Beyond the Sunset.