Friday, March 25, 2011

Listen carefully, I will say this only once...

Yesterday I participated in a fundraising event for Christchurch. As poet Renee Laing said at the Mt Roskill library last night, when disaster struck in Christchurch New Zealanders said "I want to help, what can I do?" And the truth was the best thing to do was what you are good at. So when author James George said lets do public readings of our written work in Auckland libraries, I signed up in a flash. On Friday March 25th I joined a group of authors (Ken Grace, Mihera Paterson, Bronwyn Elsmore, Nicky Pelligreno and Brennan Rigby) at the Public Library at Massey out West at 1pm and a different group (Maggie Tarver, Robina Adamson and Renee Laing) at Mt Roskill Library at 6pm and we each shared an 8 to 10 minute reading with the good folk who turned up to hear us and donate money to a good cause. I hope the audience enjoyed what we had to offer. They seemed to. I certainly enjoyed reading aloud. I read short stories from the two Pick 'n' Mix anthologies put out by Scholastic NZ. I very much enjoyed the listening too. I remember listening to stories on the radio played during school. This is where I first developed a serious crush on Greek Mythology. Careful listening, something you have to do with a live reading because there is no pause and rewind facility (no do-overs as it were) is a great skill. I listened attentively to the other readers yesterday because if you missed any seeds sown earlier in a story the twist or climax at the end could lose its potency. I read somewhere recently that we have diminished the facility of our brains by using calculators and other technological devices that save us the effort of figuring things out in our heads. Many cultures had an oral tradition that is slipping away. Many of us lose the listening skills we developed at school. Poets, as Renee Laing reminded us last night have a well organised schedule of regular readings and slams. Writers of prose have nothing like this. We should. It would be good for writers to share their work; good for listeners to enjoy some good stories, practice some good listening skills and enjoy a sense of community around a creative endeavour. We could all benefit.

4 comments:

maureen said...

The art of reading aloud is also being lost in schools. I get annoyed when I hear that teachers aren't making it a priority to read aloud a story every day...It is essential for aural development and linguistic acquisition. Giving up the story because we have run out of time is not acceptable!

Old Kitty said...

I thoroughly enjoy poetry readings!! I love going to these!! I so admire anyone able to stand up and perform their work! I can never ever do this - but y'all creative wonderful story tellers and poets and oral peoples who bring life to your work is such an entertaining and passionate way, ROCK! Take care
x

TK Roxborogh said...

I'm currently reading an entire novel to my Y11 class. They are loving it.

Yesterday, I ran a couple of workshops. The first was about the joys of being a writer and I read extracts from my works to illustrate what I was talking about.

The second was a writing workshop and, despite giving out handouts, I still read sections from them.

You've come up with a good idea Melinda.

Penny said...

I just LOVE reading aloud, and don't often have the opportunity. Thoroughly enjoyed reading the opening pages of Super Finn at the launch at the MM Day, and was most gratified by the positive feedback received. We're never too old to listen to a story!