Unicorn Hollow Podcast
Season 1, Ep 10 is here and if you ever needed a legitimate reason to disappear into a book, this is it! A quick reminder that you can listen to this right on Substack or wherever you get your podcasts. The last month has felt filled with stupid things that make me hate adulting (a never-ending-and-expensive battle with sewage, insurance, graduation prep, medical visits, an eternal fount of paperwork, etc. etc. etc.). But one beautiful bonus nestled in among the many dumb adulting things is that I have really loved getting to know my parents as actual people. A few weeks ago, I sat down to chat with my mother, Kathy Wilde, about her lifelong love of reading that started back in the 1950s with bedtime reading and a beansy library in a teeny-tiny South Dakota town. There were so many nuggets of wisdom I took away from my time with Mom, but here are a few of my top takeaways: Reading to and around kids doesn’t just cultivate generations of readers, it produces curious and engaged humans. Mom talked about how we come from a long line of women who pursued education in rural, low-income communities at a time when that was…well, weird. I’m the fourth generation of women who were college educated, voracious readers. This emphasis on reading and education created a lineage of families where books, intellectual curiosity, empathy, and stepping out of our own comfort zone—regardless of where we physically live in the world—are simply part of life. Reading offers a unique form of immersive empathy. Mom’s favorite part of reading is the ability to live inside another person’s world. Unlike other types of media, she loves that with books she can not only observe the characters’ actions, but can hear their thoughts and gain a richer understanding of the “why” behind actions and outcomes. She can live with someone while reading their story, which has allowed her to see and challenge her own prejudices and assumptions and has made her a much more empathetic person. Reading with others makes the whole experience more vivid. Several years ago, one of her dear friends of more than 40 years started a book club that has “opened up a whole new world” for Mom. The members of her book club, who have agreed to read books across a wide range of perspectives and views, pushed Mom to read books she never would have chosen on her own. Through both delightfully uplifting books and really challenging reads, Mom has had deeply meaningful discussions and has loved books that she never would have chosen on her own. Over and over, she has watched “scales fall from her eyes” as she has read books by people whose experiences and views differed sharply from her own. “I think life is so much more interesting with variety in it.” Books become a window to new experiences and a deliberate counter to becoming “set in our ways.” One of Mom’s favorite aspects of reading is that even as age makes travel more limiting, she knows she can “still get there with reading.” It has allowed her to continue to be enriched by the beautiful diversity in this world and to challenge that tendency to retreat permanently into the security of familiarity. In a polarized world that rewards one-lane thinking, Mom has made a deliberate choice to push against that by surrounding herself with books that invite her to see the world in a new way. Reading fosters hope, particularly through stories that model kindness and human resilience. When I asked Mom what gives her hope, she said books (!) and used the book, Theo of Golden by Allen Levi, as an example. She finds so much hope where she sees her faith expressed, not in formulaic ways, but by characters who engage the world with intentional, genuine kindness. Even the difficult, painful books leave her with hope because they invite her to imagine what could be rather than just looking at the world as is. Some of Mom’s Favorite Books * Eleanor’s Story [https://www.eleanorsstory.com/] by Eleanor Ramrath Garner * No Ordinary Time - Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt: The Home Front in World War II by Doris Kearns Goodwin * Cold, Sassy Tree by Olive Ann Burns * Team of Rivals: The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln by Doris Kearns Goodwin Books mentioned in this episode: * Bobbsey Twins Series by Laura Lee Hope * Nancy Drew Mystery Series by Carolyn Keene * Demon Copperhead by Barbara Kingsolver * Everything Sad is Untrue [https://www.danielnayeri.com/everythingsadisuntrue] by Daniel Nayeri * Uncle Tom’s Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe * Now I Am Known [https://petermutabazi.com/nowiamknown] https://petermutabazi.com/nowiamknownby Peter Mutabazi * Lakota Woman [https://birchbarkbooks.com/products/lakota-woman] by Mary Crow Dog * Completing the Circle [https://www.nebraskapress.unl.edu/nebraska-paperback/9780803292543/completing-the-circle/] by Virginia Driving Hawk Sneve * Spare by Prince Harry * The Correspondent by Virginia Evans * My Antonia by Willa Cather * Theo of Golden [https://bookshop.org/p/books/theo-of-golden-allen-levi/20518682?ean=9781668236512&utm_source=google&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=dsa_nonbrand&utm_content={adgroupname}&utm_term=aud-1885352274224:dsa-19959388920&gad_source=1&gad_campaignid=12440232635&gbraid=0AAAAACfld42eIw464LETjbfXsIEz6Ovud&gclid=CjwKCAjw7vzOBhBxEiwAc7WNr6ExfrRelwOIs1xTg8rfab5kQc4HSB257b-HGWnNLmLdQP4wYAhe5BoC8KYQAvD_BwE] https://bookshop.org/p/books/theo-of-golden-allen-levi/20518682?ean=9781668236512&utm_source=google&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=dsa_nonbrand&utm_content={adgroupname}&utm_term=aud-1885352274224:dsa-19959388920&gad_source=1&gad_campaignid=12440232635&gbraid=0AAAAACfld42eIw464LETjbfXsIEz6Ovud&gclid=CjwKCAjw7vzOBhBxEiwAc7WNr6ExfrRelwOIs1xTg8rfab5kQc4HSB257b-HGWnNLmLdQP4wYAhe5BoC8KYQAvD_BwEby Allen Levi 🦄 Kristin P.S. You can check out my other posts referenced in the interview: My interview with my dad 👇 My interview with my sister 👇 My first post about Mom’s reading 👇 What I’m Reading (or just finished) I’m doing a lot of middle grade reading as I keep (very, very slowly) working on my manuscript. The First State of Being by Erin Entrada Kelly [https://substack.com/profile/1590990-erin-entrada-kelly] Skandar and the Unicorn Thief by A.F. Steadman Elatsoe by Darcie Little Badger Amari and the Night Brothers by B.B. Alston Midnight for Charlie Bone by Jenny Nimmo The House with a Clock in its Walls by John Bellairs The Nevermoor Series by Jessica Townsend A Wizard’s Guide to Defensive Baking by T. Kingfisher The Neverending Story by Michael Ende How about you? How has reading impacted you? What are some of your most unexpectedly favorite books? Unicorn Hollow Podcast [https://kkwildegiuliani.substack.com/podcast] is a listener- and reader-supported series of Unicorn Hollow. If you’d like to see more of my writing, check out a Map of Unicorn Hollow [https://kkwildegiuliani.substack.com/p/a-map-of-unicorn-hollow], and then subscribe [https://kkwildegiuliani.substack.com/subscribe]to make sure you never miss a post! For centuries, artists of all disciplines have been kept afloat and creating by patrons who looked at their work and said, “Yes! This matters! This needs to be in the world.” If you have that feeling, I’d be honored if you would be my Patron by sharing my work. My posts & podcasts will stay free, but if you have the means, you can help me build up this space by becoming a paid, monthly subscriber (and get some thank-you perks!). You can also give a one-time donation on Ko-Fi [https://ko-fi.com/unicornhollow]. Writing is my career, so every bit of support goes directly to feed and clothe my small army of children. Thanks for being my unicorn! Get full access to Unicorn 🦄 Hollow at kkwildegiuliani.substack.com/subscribe [https://kkwildegiuliani.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]
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