Thursday, July 16, 2020

The Best Parts of Being a Bookish Kid in the 90s

The Best Parts of Being a Bookish Kid in the 90s Saying I was bookish in the 90s is kind books were what I did in elementary and early middle school. I was the kid carting two paperbacks to lunch in case I finished one because honestly, what was I going to do on the damn playground with no reading material? When I was young, my love of books didnt feel special or personally defining, like it does now, so I never really got to celebrate the cool little quirks of the reading culture in the 90s. MY DAY HAS COME! Time to rewind and relive the best bookish things from the decade I came up inremember this stuff?! Book It Hands down the raddest reading incentive program ever. You can talk until youre blue in the face about the drawbacks of rewarding reading, but 10 year old me would do most anything for a personal pan pizza I did not have to share with one of my three sisters.  Yes, I read for my own gratification as an adult, but I can also buy my own cheese-stuffed crust at this point. I can still feel the raised plastic stickers that would fill in the spots on the giant pin. I didnt always have the best school experiences but Book It made fifth grade bearable. Great Illustrated Classics These adaptations are probably the only reason I can hold my own in a conversation about Literature. I know its why I got a 98% on my tenth grade English Honors essay about the meaning of love in Great Expectations. While never successful with what is considered required reading, I loved these simplified versions of some of the greater works of our time. I had Heidi, Oliver Twist, Little Women, Great Expectations, and Journey to the Center of the Earth, to name a few. When I recently found a bunch in my librarys book sale, I scooped them up without a second thought. Come back to me, Great Illustrated Classics, and be my Cliffs Notes once again. Wishbone I sincerely hope you  are mind-shouting WHATS THE STORY, WISHBONE? at your computer screens right now. Wishbone is a dog (played by a talented terrier named SOCCER) who gets the starring role in adaptations of classic novels with plots that mirror the struggles his boy owner, Joe, is living out in real life. I have found, in rewatches, that it  doesnt quite hold up the way Id like it to, but you could always just blare the theme song, or check out scenes from this round up of favorite episodes. The Series I know book series for kids started well before the 90s (Nancy Drew and Hardy Boys will not be ignored), but I really feel that the super prolific and episodic series with familiar settings and characters defined the way I read in the 90s. Im thinking The Babysitters Club, Sweet Valley High, The Boxcar Children, Goosebumps even Nancy Drew got a peppy update with The  Nancy Drew Files. As an avid rereader and slightly anxious person, I always loved the comfort of knowing all the background before I dug into the latest adventure. And you cannot beat the 90s-tastic covers. Did I capture all your 90s memories? Let me know. Ill be at Pizza Hut. Image credits: Book It, Great Illustrated Classics, Wishbone, Sweet Valley Twins