Wait, what?

Jun. 4th, 2008 02:52 pm
loopychew: (Default)
[personal profile] loopychew
ExCUSE me? Do mine eyes decieve me? People want BOOKS rated?!

While I can kind of understand it in visual/motion maybe even in audio media, the concept of suggesting age limits for BOOKS is blatantly ridiculous. Considering books are the most basic form of media around and literacy is fundamental to pretty much any educational foundation, the idea of trying to impose artificial limits on who can and can't read books is patently INSANE.

The only way this could have possibly been amusing would have been to watch people foaming at the mouth as the Bible got the equivalent of an R-rating, except you KNOW people would exempt the Bible from any sort of rating.

Re: *Sigh*

Date: 2008-06-04 02:22 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kamalloy.livejournal.com
Yeah, that was basically how I worked. My parents had no trouble letting me wander through the library or the bookstore. If I read something and wasn't entirely comfortable with the subject matter, I'd put it down and either go talk to my mom (who, being a former biology teacher, knew about things) or decide that it wasn't something I was ready for yet.

I have to wonder if all these people either had really overprotective parents or if they've forgotten what their childhoods were like. I'm going to guess it was the latter.

Re: *Sigh*

Date: 2008-06-04 03:22 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ninjadebugger.livejournal.com
I, uh, I was reading through my mother's copious library of romance novels at the tender age of 6. There is nothing that will ever match the look on my mother's face when she found me reading a romance novel entitled "Animal Sex". It (and the book) are seared indelibly into my memory.

Re: *Sigh*

Date: 2008-06-04 08:41 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lirazel.livejournal.com
HAH, my experience along those lines came a bit later--eight, I think. There was a copy of Balzac's Droll Stories in the children's section of the library, mis-shelved there because someone thought the medieval-looking characters in the wood-cut end papers meant "fairy tales".

The very first story is about a courtesan named Imperia, who gets her paid protector (a cardinal) to leave all the fixings for a sumptuous feast behind him and leave unsatisfied. She then shares the feast, along with... other things... with a very handsome novice monk. The wood-cuts later in the book were also very interesting, and the extensions to my vocabulary quite useful in later life. Not a single "dirty" word in the whole 200+ pages, mind you, but the power of allusion was greatly evident.

No, I didn't tell the librarians. I mean, it was in the children's room and I was a child, right?

Re: *Sigh*

Date: 2008-06-04 10:12 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ninjadebugger.livejournal.com
No need to bother the adults with that silliness, they have better things to worry about.

Profile

loopychew: (Default)
loopychew

December 2017

S M T W T F S
     12
3456789
10111213141516
17181920212223
24252627 282930
31      

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jul. 8th, 2025 12:23 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios