Anyways, I had a pretty swell time, and it took me a trip down memory lane. Book fairs have always been great events for me. In Alsyd (primary school and junior high) we'd have mini-book fairs from companies like "Books for Less" and they were always spectacular. The culture of reading is one which I greatly believe in, and even though we're in a technologically-advanced era with e-books, podcasts, audio-books etc, there's something so intimate about curling up in bed with a book. Total escape. And with initiatives like the National Book Festival, how can one not get drawn back into reading? I wonder if Ghana and other African countries have similar initiatives, if not, this is one definitely worth 'borrowing' - especially with the new crop of young African writers springing up across the continent. Another initiative in Alsyd was to award students who'd borrowed the most books from the library that year. I had the pleasure of being one of the first students to win that award, and if anything, it encouraged my classmates and I to read more.
Aside the various tents, they also had a couple of "America Reads" sections where kids could play word games, meet human-sized book characters etc. Not surprising, I had the most fun in the "Teens & Children" section. The author -- don't remember his name -- was really engaging and told a story about how he and his childhood friend were determined to ruin a toy they had bought specifically for that purpose: destroying it. I'd filmed it, and would have put it up, but unfortunately I lost it :(. At the end of the anecdote, he talked about why he utilizes multi-media - videos, internet, CDs etc - in his work. As a (clearly) distracted child, he would rarely sit still for a few minutes, much more pick up an entire book and read, so he figured incorporating multi-media - collector cards, internet games and so on - he could get more kids interested in reading. Which I think is pretty smart. When I was 11 years old, my parents got my siblings and I, a couple of education-based CDs - Carmen Sandiego Math and Geography - and they were so interesting and engaging that we forgot we were actually "learning". I liked the Geography edition the most, cos I got to solve crimes and travel the world over in search of the villain, and boy, did I learn a lot about countries and their capitals, monuments, culture etc. [Mayhap, that has something to do with my aptitude for picking up languages and my interest in traveling and international affairs?]
Okay, so instead of going on and on about the event, I'm just gonna put up the pictures that I do have so you guys can share in what was a great event. Enjoy!!
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