From my Facebook page, on Aug. 9, 2019 --
When the eighth-grade reading list has all the stuff you read in college on it, and you think, “Great! I have all these already!” But really, you don’t, because somewhere along the way you lost “Of Mice and Men,” which you never really liked, anyway, and it’s not even in any of the heavy collections you’ve trucked from Bakersfield to Seattle to Fresno to Flagstaff to Sacramento to Bakersfield to San Diego, Connecticut and Florida, and you notice that the Norton Anthology of American Literature cost $28 at the Golden Empire Bookstore in, probably, 1993, and you don’t recognize the handwriting or understand the notes in the margins, but know the script must be yours and that you once understood.... And you find old postcards stuffed between the pages from a college friend who was brave enough to pack up and travel the world, and you text her pictures of the postcards — 19-cent stamps and almost 30 years ago!! — and you’re glad you had to search for that Steinbeck text, even if now you are headed back to the Amazon to buy a paperback with no history at all.
.....
"Of Mice and Men" used to be on this shelf with these other blue-jacketed Steinbeck hardbacks, a Book of the Month Club special collection, purchased decades ago, when I lived in the California so familiar in Steinbeck's work. I probably felt like any self-respecting resident of the Central Valley should own these books, though, apparently, I never got around to reading them all.

Because, certainly, I would have remembered "Of Mice and Men."
Y'all could've warned me.
The intent of the Eighth-Grade Experience Project is to try to reconnect with my son, who is 12 and has copped a teenage attitude for five, maybe six years. I'm hopeful that having something in common like shared stories will show him I'm interested in his world and give us something to talk about.
"Of Mice and Men" gives us lots to mull -- animal abuse, abuse of people with disabilities, poverty, mob mentality, oh, and murder, among other polite conversation topics like inequality and whorehouses.
Blake's never even seen a rated-R movie.
Maybe it's partly our fault we're in this situation? Blake's fall birthday meant he squeaked into kindergarten at 4. We realized that one day he'd be the last in his grade to drive, and he'd go away to college before legal adulthood, but we never considered what would happen when the subject matter in middle school outpaced what was age appropriate for him.
"You already finished that?" he asked me the other day, pointing to our new copy of "OMAM."
"Yes, it's short," I told him.
"That's good," he said.
"Yes," I said.
Then he said, "The best books we read were in sixth grade.
"Last year's books were not good at all. They were all tied to what we were learning in history. They were all about war and suffering."
I hadn't realized that.
Last night, we picked up Dylan's sixth-grade class read ("Insignificant Events in the Life of a Cactus"), and I read aloud to them both while they played Minecraft on the XBox. Dylan was mad -- he'd been told to "not read ahead," but Blake begged me to keep going.
So I did, practically yelling to be heard over Dylan's protests.
When I stopped, Blake said, "You should be an audiobook reader."
"Oh, I'm that good, huh?" I said.
"Well, you're not terrible," he said.
Sixth-grade book for the win.
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| Blake, age 12. Size 13 feet. Trying on a suit for cotillion, Sept. 1, 2019. |

