If
you're from the west of Scotland, you'll know what I'm talking about
when I refer to the Glasgow
Uni accent.
For
those of you who have been fortunate enough not to hear this
atrocity, it can only be likened to sticking a skewer into your ear
whilst chewing tinfoil and banging your head off a brick wall, all as
the theme tune from Neighbours blares repeatedly in the background.
Every
sentence is presented like a question. Whiney “uh” sounds
suddenly appear after words which end with plosive sounds. When a
group of these people are together, the accent inexplicably becomes
louder and, when alcohol is added, it becomes even more pronounced.
Perhaps
most irritatingly of all, the accent is usually accompanied by a
cigarette being carelessly waggled around in the air. Interestingly,
these cigarettes never seem to be smoked very much – they appear to
be used as more of a life-threatening accessory.
(As
an aside, I haven't smoked now for nearly six months so I'm quite
enjoying life up here on my nicotine-free high horse.)
However,
the purpose of this blog was not to talk about the Glasgow Uni
accent, mostly because it actually makes me feel a wee bit sick to
think about it too much. The reason I mentioned the accent is because
it's what drew me to a conversation I overheard in the park
yesterday.
I
was walking home from work, happily contemplating the clean jammies
and Great Expectations DVD that awaited me there, when I found myself
stoating behind two girls, probably near me in age, who were loudly
(remember what I said about the accent in numbers) discussing one of
the girls' boyfriend's sister.
“I
mean, like, she's in primary seven for god's sake, and she's still
reading, like, Lemony Snicket. When I was that age, my favourite book
was War and Peace, you know? Honestly, it's like, if you're not going
to read properly,
then don't bother reading at all.”
My
happiness disintegrated quicker than I imagine her dignity disappears
down the drain on a Friday night at Cheesy Pop.
(As
another aside, I've also been Cheesy Pop free for more than two years
so, once again, I'm allowed to enjoy my smugness.)
Now, I've read War and Peace, as well as the Lemony Snicket books - and I know which I'd rather read again. I'll give you a step for a hint... It isn't the one featuring Napoleon.
Now, I've read War and Peace, as well as the Lemony Snicket books - and I know which I'd rather read again. I'll give you a step for a hint... It isn't the one featuring Napoleon.
But
it wasn’t the girl’s taste (or lack thereof) in books that
irritated me – in fact, quite the opposite. It was how judgmental
she could be about an 11 year old kid who was actually making the
effort to read a book. If, when she was 11, her favourite book was
indeed War and Peace (which I highly doubt anyway seeing as, ten
years down the line, she still found it difficult to string together
a sentence without the word “like”) then whoop-de-bloody-do for
her.
However,
if her beau’s younger sister was more interested in the Lemony
Snicket books then what gives Mrs Tolstoy the right to judge? At
least the little kid is reading a book (and a good one at that),
which is more than can be said about some of her peers.
Remember
how up in arms everyone was about the Fifty Shades of Grey books?
Aye, they’re not the most elegantly-written novels of all time, but
every woman (or man, I would hate to stereotype) that picked up one
of those books was reading something, and developing their own sense
of imagination.
Say,
for example, you have one child reading a Lemony Snicket book, and a
second reading War and Peace. Seeing as we're imagining, we'll also
pretend that the second child's tiny ineffectual hands haven't been
crushed by how freakin' huge the latter novel is. Now, let's say they
both finish their respective books. Which child do you think is more
likely to have the desire to ever read again? I'll give you another
step for a hint... Again, it's not going to be the one who just read
about Napoleon.
No
book can ever be deemed as "proper", and to do so shows a
terrifying lack of common sense.
My degree is in English Literature so it goes without saying that I love nothing more than a good book. But I'm also aware that a lot of people don't enjoy reading and go through their lives having only read the stuff they were made to study in school. so, for this reason, when I see a person reading a book that I might not necessarily choose, I don't feel the need to bleat about how crap Cheryl Cole's biography is compared to Ulysses. Instead, I am encouraged by the fact that this person is reading something, rather than slowly becoming addicted to daft wee games on their iPhones.
Different strokes for different folks.
Saying that, if I ever see Mrs Tolstoy again, I will happily rattle her about the noggin with a copy of War and Peace and then calmly ask her how she liked them apples.
My degree is in English Literature so it goes without saying that I love nothing more than a good book. But I'm also aware that a lot of people don't enjoy reading and go through their lives having only read the stuff they were made to study in school. so, for this reason, when I see a person reading a book that I might not necessarily choose, I don't feel the need to bleat about how crap Cheryl Cole's biography is compared to Ulysses. Instead, I am encouraged by the fact that this person is reading something, rather than slowly becoming addicted to daft wee games on their iPhones.
Different strokes for different folks.
Saying that, if I ever see Mrs Tolstoy again, I will happily rattle her about the noggin with a copy of War and Peace and then calmly ask her how she liked them apples.
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