You Can't Read This: Forbidden Books, Lost Writing, Mistranslations, and Codes

You Can't Read This: Forbidden Books, Lost Writing, Mistranslations, and Codes
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Age Range
10+
Release Date
April 04, 2006
ISBN
088776732X
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Wherever people can read, there are stories about the magic, mystery, and power of what they read. Val Ross presents a history of reading that is, in fact, the story of the monumental, on-going struggle to read. From Enheduanna, daughter of Sargon the Great, the world’s oldest signed author to Empress Shotoku of Japan who in 764 ordered the printing of one million Buddhist prayers; from the story of Hulagu, Ghengis Khan’s nasty brother who destroyed the library of Baghdad to Bowdler and the censorship of Shakespeare, there have been barriers to reading ranging from the physical to the economical, social, and political. Written for children ages ten and up, You Can’t Read This explores the development of alphabets, the decoding of ancient languages, and censorship in Ancient Rome and modern America. It's about secret writing, trashed libraries, writers on the run, writers in hiding, books that are thought to have magical powers and mistranslations that started wars. It's about people: from the American slave Frederick Douglass to girls in Afghanistan in the year 2001 who defied laws that prevented them from learning to read. What do all these stories have in common? They’re all about how texts contain power – and how people everywhere throughout history have devoted their wills and their brains to reading and unleashing the power of the word. With lavish illustrations and an index, this is history at its finest.

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Did you know that the world's first best-selling novel was written by a woman, Lady Murasaki, in medieval Japan? That the printing press with movable type was invented independently on opposite sides of the world by both King Sejong of Korea and Johannes Gutenberg? That in pre-Civil War America people could be fined, whipped and imprisoned for teaching slaves to read?

Anyone who loves reading will be enthralled by You Can't Read This and its 18 far-reaching tales of forbidden books, lost writing, mistranslations and codes. Author and journalist Val Ross doesn't limit her history of the written word to the ancient world and the West: she travels around the globe to bring to life the most fascinating historical figures and developments in reading and writing from all parts of the world. With its short, easy-to-read chapters and excellently chosen illustrations, this entertaining history will captivate readers and make them stop and think about the real significance of this unconscious act we take for granted hundreds of times a day.
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