Mrs. Pam loved books and talked about them like they were her old friends. As a group of gap-toothed seven-year-olds, we thought that was pretty funny. Now, at 28, I get it...completely. She would sit at the front of her room, look over the well-worn and much loved collection on her shelf, and then she would carefully select one after pondering what we might enjoy. We waited on the edges of our seats, literally, anxious to discover what literary world we would be swept away to next. Mrs. Pam would open the book, run her hand down the crease to help the pages lie flat, and then she would do the craziest thing! She would sniff the book. Just once...but a really long sniff. And she would say, "Mmmm..." like she had just eaten a warm, gooey chocolate chip cookie. We giggled then, but I remember feeling like I had completely let Mrs. Pam down the day I read my first Kindle book.
With Mrs. Pam, I traveled to the world of The Shoeshine Girl, and Mrs. Pam read in such a way that you could smell the shoe polish. We all were disgusted with the lack of fairness and equality in The Whipping Boy, and I got my first glimpse of New York City through the pages of The Cricket in Times Square.
Reading had always been valued in my family, but Mrs. Pam taught my why. She showed me that loving reading is perfectly natural, and that sometimes, a perfect book can fit a time in your life in much the same way a perfect song can fit a mood. A love of literature is a love that can last forever, far past the days of The Boxcar Children and The Baby-Sitters Club, and one teacher who really shares a love for reading can ignite that love in her students.
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