The Bookfair

Published May 22, 2023, 4:00 AM

Our story tonight is called The Bookfair and it’s a story about a love of reading and the creativity that inspires. It’s also about the last days of school before summer vacation, taking class outside into the open air and the feeling of watching little ones grow up and expand their worlds.

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We give to a different charity each week. This week we are giving to Reading is FUNdamental, Committed to a literate America by inspiring a passion for reading among all children. https://www.rif.org/

Welcome to Bedtime Stories for everyone, in which nothing much happens, you feel good, and then you fall asleep. I'm Catherine Nikolay. I read and write all the stories you hear on Nothing Much Happens with audio engineering by Bob Witttersheim. We give to a different charity each week, and this week we are giving to Reading is Fundamental, committed to illiterate America by inspiring a passion for reading among all children. Learn more in our show notes. You can subscribe to our ad free and bonus episode feeds at Nothing Much Happens dot com, which also makes for a love gift and truly supports us so that we can keep bringing you bedtime Stories. Now, since every episode is someone's first, let me say a bit about how this works. In order to fall asleep, your brain needs just the right amount of engagement, and if that engagement can be peaceful unpleasant, well all the better. Sticking to a regular bedtime routine becomes a lot easier when it feels good. So I have a soft, relaxing story to tell you, and I'll tell it twice, going a little slower the second time through, just by listening to the sound of my voice you'll fall asleep. This is brain conditioning, a sort of grown up sleep training, so be patient. If you are new to it, you'll find with practice and over time that you'll fall asleep more quickly. And if you wake in the middle of the night, don't hesitate to just start the story over again. Now it's time. Set everything down and switch off the light. Get into your favorite sleeping position, and let your whole body drop heavy into the bed. The day is over and all that is left to be done is rest. Take a slow, deep breath in through your nose and sigh through your mouth. Nice again, Breathe in and out. Good. Our story tonight is called The Book Fair, and it's a story about a love of reading and the creativity that inspires. It's also about the last days of school before summer vacation, taking class outside into the open air, and the feeling of watching little ones grow up and expand their worlds. The Book Fair there were only a few weeks of school left before summer vacation began, and you could feel the anticipation when you walked the halls. There was a push pull energy in every classroom, a push to the end to make the most of the last days of learning and a pull to the warming weather, an adventure of summertime. Sometimes that poll was literal. Our students and even ourselves pulled to the windows to look at the trees in full leaf and the bright blue skies. We teachers were doing our best to walk the line to keep our students interest and still let them be kids who had big feelings about summer break. We'd found over the years that having a few special events to look forward to in the last month or so of classes helped every one come to school with some enthusiasm, so the schedule would be full right up until the final day. We'd planned a school wide field day. After weeks of being asked hour after hour if we could have classes outside, we finally would be able to say yes. It would be a whole day of outdoor activities. There would be a chalk drawing contest on the back parking lot, a treasure hunt with clues planted all over the playground, races and games on the athletic fields, and snack tables set up just about everywhere. Our cafeteria staff would make gallons of lemonade and pyramids of rice crispy snacks. There would be giant fruit bowls full of apples and pears and bananas that no one would eat. And at lunchtime, a small caravan of cars would pull up, delivering enough pizzas to feed us all. A feat that seemed impossible happened every year. There was also the spring concert to look forward to. Our fifth through eighth graders would file into their seats on stage in the auditorium and nervously grip their trumpets and clarinet's. Our music teacher would stand on her riser with the music spread open on a stand in front of her, a baton in her hand, and wait till every musician's eyes were on her. She'd raise her baton. They'd all take a breath together their instruments, and ready and off they'd go. That was one of my favorite nights of the year. Are students playing together with such focus and care. Whenever I walked through the music hallway, I'd hear them working through a new piece or else playing something they'd work on for weeks with pride. The night'd smile, all of them coming so far. That was a night when all our local restaurants would be busy, families taking their saxophonists and xylophone players out for a meal, still in their matching dress pants and buttoned down shirts. Of course, our eighth graders would be graduating and moving on, and that was always an emotional day for all of us. When you see a student, especially one who might have struggled on their way up from elementary school, now standing in front of their families and fellows, ready to head into their next journey, it makes your heart brim so glad for them, ungrateful to have been a part of it. And then when they come back to visit it years later, when they stop into your classroom or office and you can spot the little face inside of the grown up one they now wear, and they tell you what they are doing, how their life is going. It's a feeling of pride. A child you helped in your way to raise who comes home and remembers you. I was thinking of all of these moments, getting a little misty if I'm honest, as I was setting up for my own personal favorite end of the school year event, and that was the book Fair. We were a book obsessed school that had started years ago with our last school librarian, whose love for reading was so great that it became contagious. She ran reading contests for every grade and started a couple of different book clubs for the staff. She made curated tables in the library for different genres for every holiday, for the birth days of favored authors. She wore costumes pretty regularly and had boxes of props the kids could play with as they listened to stories. And she turned our small, poorly attended book fairs into events that the whole school looked forward to. When she retired, it took several of us to fill her shoes, but we'd managed to keep this love for books a mainstay in our school, and the fair was still a big part of it. It no longer fit in the school library, so we were setting up in the gymnasium today, and we didn't just set up a bunch of folding tables and lay out books on them. We made the gym into a portal to distant lands and other times. Part of what made our students fall in love with reading was bringing the stories out of the books. So we'd each picked a few favorite titles, and with the help of the seventh and eighth grade art classes, were transforming each section of the gym into a slice of those worlds. One of my picks told a story of a world under the ocean where atlantis still thrived, and the art students had covered the windows with blue and green gels so that the light coming in rippled like water. There were streamers that moved on a crank, washing over you, a bit like those strips of cloth in a car wash, and we had a speaker playing wave sounds across the gym. In our classic section, rubber hobbit feet had been procured and set in a row under a half dozen hanging clothes. I'd heard there was a ring hidden somewhere in the display, and that one of the many science fair of volcanoes had been saved to erupt at an exciting moment. We had book worlds for all ages of our students, ghost stories and first loves, mysteries and adventures, sports and science, and every way to be in the world. In our school, we welcomed every story, and our students flourished as there were worlds grew wide with each turned page. We would send them into the summer with an armload of new ideas, and I was already looking forward to welcoming them back in the fall. To watch them continue to grow the book fair. There were only a few weeks of school left before summer vacation began, when you could feel the anticipation when you walked the halls. There was a push pull energy in every classroom. A push to the end to make the most of the last days of learning, and the pull to the warmer weather on adventure of summer time. Sometimes that pull was literal, our students and ourselves pulled to the windows to look at the trees in full leaf in bright blue skies. We teachers were doing our best to walk the line to keep our students interest and still let them be kids. We'd found over the years that having a few special events to look forward in the last month or so of classes helped everyone come to school with some enthusiasm, so the schedule would be full right up till the final day. We'd planned a school wide field day. After weeks of being asked hour after hour if we could have classes outside, we would finally be able to say yes. It would be a whole day of outdoor activities, with a chalk drawing contest on the back parking lot, a treasure hunt with clues planted all over the playground, races and games on the athletic fields, and snack tables set up just about everywhere. Our cafeteria staff would make gallons of lemonade and pyramids of rice crispy snacks. There would be giant fruit bowls full of apples and pears and bananas that no one would eat. And at lunch time, a small caravan of cars would pull up, delivering enough pizzas to feed us all, a feat that seemed impossible but somehow happened every year. There was also the spring concert to look forward to. Our fifth through eighth graders would file into their seats on stage in the auditorium and nervously grip their trumpets and clarinets, where music teacher would stand on her riser with her music spread open on a stand in front of her, a baton in her hand, and wait till every musician's eyes were on her. She'd raise her baton and they'd all take a breath together, their instruments raised, and ready they'd go. That was one of the best nights of the year. Are students playing together with such focus and care. Whenever I walked through the music hallway, I'd hear them working through a new piece or else playing something they'd work on for weeks with pride, and I'd smile, all of them coming so far. That was a night when all our local restaurants would be busy, families taking their saxophonists and xylophone players out for a meal, still in their matching dress pants unbuttoned down shirts. Of course, our eighth graders would be graduating and moving on, and that was always an emotional day for all of us. When you see a student, especially one who might have struggled on their way up from elementary school, now standing in front of their families and fellows, ready to head into the next journey, it makes your heart brim so glad for them and so grateful to have been a part of it. And then when they come back to visit years later, when they stop into your classroom or office and you can spot the little face inside of the grown up one they now wear, and they tell you what they're doing, how their life is going. It's a feeling of pride. A child you helped in your way to raise who comes home and remembers you. I was thinking of all these moments, getting a little misty. If I'm honest, as I was setting up for my own personal favorite end of the school year event, and that was the book Fair. We were a book obsessed school. It had started years ago with our last school librarian, whose love for reading was so great that it became contagious. She ran reading contests for every grade and started a couple of different book clubs for the staff. She made curated tables in the library for different genres for every holiday, for the birth days of favorite authors. She wore costumes pretty regularly and had boxes of props the kids could play with as they listened to stories. She turned our small, poorly attended book fairs into events that the whole school looked forward to. When she retired, it took several of us to fill her shoes, but we'd managed to keep this love for books a mainstay in our school, and the fair was still a big part of it. It no longer fit in the school library, so we were setting up in the gymnasium to day. We didn't just set up a bunch of folding tables and lay out books on them. We made the gem into a portal to distant lands at other times. Part of what made our students fall in love with reading was bringing the stories out of the books. So we'd each picked a few favorite titles, and with the help of the seventh and eighth grade art classes, we're transforming each section of the Gem into a slice of those worlds. One of my picks told a story of a world under the ocean, where atlantis still thrived, and the art students had covered the windows with blue and green gels, so the light coming in rippled like water. There were streamers that moved on a crank, washing over you, a bit like those strips of cloth and a car wash, and we had a speaker playing wave sounds across the gym. In our classics section, rubber hobbit feet had been procured and sat in a row under a half dozen hanging cloaks. I'd heard there was a ring hidden somewhere in the display, and that one of the many Science Fair volcanoes had been saved to erupt. Had an exciting moment. We had book worlds for all ages of our students. Ghost stories and first loves, mysteries and adventures, sports and science, and every way to be in the world. In our school, we welcomed every story, and our students flourished as there were, worlds grew wider with each turned page. We would send them into the summer with an armload of new ideas, and I was already looking forward to welcoming them back in the fall to watch them continue to grow. Sweet dreams,

Nothing much happens: bedtime stories to help you sleep

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