I like reading a book if the storyline is captivating, don't get me wrong. However, I was never had a strive to read like some of my other friends. When I was in 4th grade, though, all the students had to take part in a competition called
Battle of the Books. Fourth graders were given a list of twenty books, and were required to read a minimum of five of them. At the end of the year, every student had to take this test on all twenty stories and the four students who score the highest in each class formed a team. Then the classes compete in a head-to-head challenge with a host and buzzer and everything. I read maybe nine of them, and answered the questions I knew on the cumulative test and Christmas treed the rest. Guess what...I got the highest score in the class and was nominated captain of Mrs. Ogelby's team. Well, we were screwed in the competition round if I was captain and only read nine of the twenty novels! Since there was a week or two until the class competition, I sat down everyday in between then and tore through as many books as I could. Some of the books looked so boring, but I felt like I needed to do this for the team. In retrospect, the books I thought would be boring were actually some of the best ones I read. I think I ended up reading 15 before the class round. Guess what...WE WON THE CLASS COMPETITION, TOO. Our team ended up representing Camino Elementary at the Tampa Convention Center that month. We won
another round at the convention center, but placed second in the district finals.
Battle of the Books might have sounded lame in the
first place, but after our team won
first place in the class competition, it all got real. Plus, I learned to not judge a book by its cover (literally) and learned to expand my breadth of literary knowledge!