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The healing power of reading

I want to talk today about how reading can change our lives and about the limits of that change. Voice Reading
I want to talk to you about how reading can give us a shareable world of powerful human connection. Voice Reading
But also about how that connection is always partial. Voice Reading
How reading is ultimately a lonely, idiosyncratic undertaking. Voice Reading
The writer who changed my life was the great African American novelist James Baldwin. Voice Reading
When I was growing up in Western Michigan in the 1980s, there weren't many Asian American writers interested in social change. Voice Reading
And so I think I turned to James Baldwin as a way to fill this void, as a way to feel racially conscious. Voice Reading
But perhaps because I knew I wasn't myself African American, I also felt challenged and indicted by his words. Voice Reading
Especially these words: "There are liberals who have all the proper attitudes, but no real convictions. Voice Reading
When the chips are down and you somehow expect them to deliver, they are somehow not there." They are somehow not there. Voice Reading
I took those words very literally. Voice Reading
Where should I put myself? Voice Reading
I went to the Mississippi Delta, one of the poorest regions in the United States. Voice Reading
This is a place shaped by a powerful history. Voice Reading
In the 1960s, African Americans risked their lives to fight for education, to fight for the right to vote. Voice Reading
I wanted to be a part of that change, to help young teenagers graduate and go to college. Voice Reading
When I got to the Mississippi Delta, it was a place that was still poor, still segregated, still dramatically in need of change. Voice Reading
My school, where I was placed, had no library, no guidance counselor, but it did have a police officer. Half the teachers were substitutes and when students got into fights, the school would send them to the local county jail. Voice Reading
This is the school where I met Patrick. Voice Reading
He was 15 and held back twice, he was in the eighth grade. Voice Reading
He was quiet, introspective, like he was always in deep thought. Voice Reading
And he hated seeing other people fight. Voice Reading
I saw him once jump between two girls when they got into a fight and he got himself knocked to the ground. Voice Reading
Patrick had just one problem. Voice Reading

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