Reading rates may be falling, but the word will survive
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TONY DODERO
Time goes by so fast sometimes.
This week’s headlines on the 10th anniversary of the grand opening
of the Newport Beach Central Library on Avocado Avenue brought back
memories for me that don’t seem that long ago.
Yet, it was exactly 12 years ago this month that I covered the
story of that very same library’s groundbreaking, another sequence in
the dreams of former councilwoman and library board member Lucille
Kuehn and the library’s No. 1 benefactor, Elizabeth Stahr, who had
both worked so hard to see it come true.
There was much pomp and circumstance that day as a Marine Corps
band from El Toro played and dignitaries such as Rep. Chris Cox and
former astronaut Buzz Aldrin donned hardhats and dug out the fresh
ground with shovels.
The dramatic conclusion: Newport Beach loves its libraries and of
course the books that come with them.
Coincidentally, as Newport Beach was celebrating the 10th year of
the central library, a report this week was issued by the National
Endowment for the Arts that painted a gloomy picture of literary
reading and the love of the printed word.
The survey of adults 18 and over, conducted by the Census Bureau,
titled “Reading at Risk: A Survey of Literary Reading in America,”
listed 10 key findings: * The percentage of adult Americans reading literature has dropped
dramatically over the past 20 years.
* The decline in literary reading parallels a decline in total
book reading.
* The rate of decline in literary reading is accelerating.
* Women read more literature than men do, but literary reading by
both groups is declining at significant rates.
* Literary reading is declining among whites, African Americans
and Latinos.
* Literary reading is declining among all education levels.
* Literary reading is declining among all age groups.
* The steepest decline in literary reading is in the youngest age
groups.
* The decline in literary reading foreshadows an erosion in
cultural and civic participation.
* The decline in reading correlates with increased participation
in a variety of electronic media, including the Internet, video games
and portable digital devices.
For some perspective on this, I called a librarian, who I was sure
would see this as the Apocalypse, the fall of western civilization,
the end of the world as we know it, right?
Wrong.
“I just read that report about two hours ago,” said Linda
Katsouleas, the director of Newport Beach Library Services, who has
been busy celebrating the 10th anniversary of the central library
this week.
“Like many surveys, I think it is not as comprehensive as it might
be,” she said. “I wonder if they considered the fact that with some
of our young people, so much reading is done online. Many young
people read magazines and books online. It is reading. It’s simply
through a different format.”
Wow. Well, that caught me off guard.
But how can we get people to read more, I implored?
She wasn’t buying into my “Chicken Little” questioning. (That’s a
book reference by the way.)
“I don’t think reading has necessarily declined,” she said. “We
are just doing it differently. In fact, I read that article (the
survey) online.
“There is a decline of reading in traditional formats,” she
conceded, but she wasn’t alarmed by that.
“I don’t see that as the end of the world. The writing is still
happening. The reading is still happening. Where do libraries fit
into all this? Actually, we are right in the middle, just like
always. Instead of getting people to look up the right books or right
magazines, we give them the right websites.”
And Katsouleas said despite the bad news on the national front,
Newport Beach trends simply don’t follow that. As we reported last
week, Newport Beach is one of the best-read communities in the state.
“Our people read an average of 19 books a year,” she said.
Today, Katsouleas said, young kids read books like the Harry
Potter series and then go to a website to chat about it. Those types
of things probably aren’t recorded in surveys, she believes.
Still, the idea that my dusty copy of “Farewell to Arms” or Agatha
Christie mystery novels are soon headed for the scrap heap to be
replaced by hand-held computer screens just gnaws at me.
So, I called Roger McGonegal to see what he thought could be done.
McGonegal is the district literacy chairman for Rotary District
5320, encompassing all of Orange County and has been involved in the
Los Angeles Times Reading by Nine program for the last five years.
That program, with sponsorships by the Times, the Rotary clubs and
the Daily Pilot, helps puts books in the hands of underprivileged
children at Westside Costa Mesa schools.
I asked him about his love for the written word.
“I grew up in a family of teachers,” McGonegal said. “I was
exposed to books and expected to read from the earliest time.
Therefore, I’ve carried it all my life.”
He encourages those who want to help others learn to read to go to
the libraries and schools and volunteer.
In fact, he said through Reading by Nine, admission to the Orange
County Fair on July 28 is free for anyone who brings in one new or
three “gently used” recreational reading books for kindergarten
through third-grade children.
Just as so many things have changed since I covered that
groundbreaking 12 years ago, make no mistake, book reading will
probably change from its current form, so too, will reading
newspapers.
But for those who cherish and believe in the power of the written
word as a cornerstone of democracy, maybe we don’t have anything to
fear.
“It will still be reading; it will still be communicating; it will
still be learning,” Katsouleas said of the future of reading.
I sure hope she’s right.
For more on the National Endowment of the Arts survey, go to
https://www.nea.gov/pub/
ReadingAtRisk.pdf.
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