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Is it necessary to have an understanding of an age to read a writer/ a novel? Think and answer.

  No, In our age, more and more people watch television, film and video in their spare time and consequently have less time for reading novels. Some critics have therefore proclaimed the death of the novel. But if you consider the number of novels that are published each year, you will agree that the novel is far from dead. On the contrary, it has diversified into newer forms so that we now have campus novels (dealing with university life), Black novels (expressing the experience of Blacks in Africa or in America and the West), Jewish fiction, popular romances, detective novels, science fiction, and crime thrillers. The list is almost endless. For example, if you travel in local transport in London (the underground train popularly referred to as the ‘tube’ or in the bus) you will find most commuters lost deep in some best-seller or other. It is clear then that the novel is alive and well and thriving.

It is quite difficult to remember the exact age that I started reading books. But when I remember about the long journey, it has been quite sweet.

As early as I can remember, maybe at the age of one or two, my mother read us stories from Magic Pot and Kalikkudukka. (The local children's magazines). They came on Fridays. I remember waking up early in the morning and waiting at the gate for the newspaper boy to bring them on Fridays and pestering my mother to read them out for me. 

They admitted me to a nursery when I was three. I was already in love with the art of reading. I insisted they teach me to read. I was too bored of playing. By 4, I was already reading magicpots myself.

They admitted me to a nursery when I was three. I was already in love with the art of reading. I insisted they teach me to read. I was too bored of playing. By 4, I was already reading magicpots myself. 

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