I have this tension with bookmarks-- I'm the kind of reader who doesn't really need more than one at a time, yet I find them so addictively desirable. I don't know who's out there making them, but they're doing a bang-up job.
After all this time, maybe my favorite bookmark is one which a colleague made and sent to me thirty years ago. I might not notice if I lost other bookmarks, but this is one I'd genuinely be saddened to misplace.
On the other hand, our little library contains a lot of books from my oldest brother, most which I've not yet read. Pull one off the shelf, and its bookmark is likely to fall to the floor-- a ticket from some flight he took back when he had that kind of job (traveling a lot).
I’ve used many things as bookmarks. A rubber band. A receipt. A train ticket. A feather. A blade of grass. Another (smaller) book. A pen. A fridge magnet. My memory. A business card. A shoe. A ruler. Lego. A post-it.
I went through a stage of not using bookmarks when I was still in school. I wrote down the page number in my diary to track how many pages and how many books I was reading. I soon gave up because I didn’t just read a chapter and then stop. I kept reading between meals or when waiting for the school bus, or during recess, or when the class was boring. It was tedious taking out my diary every time I read a few pages. I soon reverted back to using bookmarks. I think I started writing the page numbers on the bookmark instead of my diary. I still remember I read an average of 80 books a year in the last 3 years of Elementary school.
I have this tension with bookmarks-- I'm the kind of reader who doesn't really need more than one at a time, yet I find them so addictively desirable. I don't know who's out there making them, but they're doing a bang-up job.
After all this time, maybe my favorite bookmark is one which a colleague made and sent to me thirty years ago. I might not notice if I lost other bookmarks, but this is one I'd genuinely be saddened to misplace.
On the other hand, our little library contains a lot of books from my oldest brother, most which I've not yet read. Pull one off the shelf, and its bookmark is likely to fall to the floor-- a ticket from some flight he took back when he had that kind of job (traveling a lot).
I’ve used many things as bookmarks. A rubber band. A receipt. A train ticket. A feather. A blade of grass. Another (smaller) book. A pen. A fridge magnet. My memory. A business card. A shoe. A ruler. Lego. A post-it.
I went through a stage of not using bookmarks when I was still in school. I wrote down the page number in my diary to track how many pages and how many books I was reading. I soon gave up because I didn’t just read a chapter and then stop. I kept reading between meals or when waiting for the school bus, or during recess, or when the class was boring. It was tedious taking out my diary every time I read a few pages. I soon reverted back to using bookmarks. I think I started writing the page numbers on the bookmark instead of my diary. I still remember I read an average of 80 books a year in the last 3 years of Elementary school.