Friday, April 3, 2009

They read it!

I still get a kick out of seeing Nancy's stuff in bookstores and libraries, but I've grown to expect that. It's more fun when her books turn up in unexpected places. A friend who frequently makes home visits has seen Impossible in not one but two houses in recent weeks, where it was being read by a couple of different teenage girls. Seeing it available for reading is one thing, seeing it actually being read is heartwarming.

Irony alert (the real kind, not the lame hipster version) -- possibly the one word in the English language that creates the most confusion upon being read describes the very act that created the confusion. The past tense of read is no sweat when you're speaking and listening, but it's tricky when you're reading and writing, especially if the sentence doesn't give you any clue what is meant: e.g. "I read. I read today." What did I just say, exactly? Even I don't know. We oughtta use a different spelling for the past tense, such as red (which as a verb wouldn't clash with the adjective) or redd. Of course that can't/won't happen; I'm just sayin'...

4 comments:

Elizabeth said...

When I was in first grade, I got the word "read" (as in, past tense of read) wrong on a spelling test because I thought it was spelt "read," but that didn't make sense to me, so I wrote down "red." And it was wrong. But now I feel vindicated.

Jim McCoy said...

I've got your back, Elizabeth. If you'd like me to have a word with your first grade teacher, maybe we can get your grade fixed retroactively...

Elizabeth said...

It was a pretty big blemish on my first-grade record, let me tell you ...

Incidentally, I'm very sorry that my first comment to this blog has nothing to do with Nancy Werlin. I keep hoping she might tour down in eastern Pennsylvania some time ...

Jim McCoy said...

An eastern PA visit could certainly happen at some point, Elizabeth. Talk to your local bookstores and libraries (including your own), and you never know...