Discovering Books
- Share via
Kelly Candaele, trustee for the Los Angeles Community College District, writer for the New York Times, the Nation and Irish America magazine:
I really discovered books for the first time when I got into college. I wasn’t surrounded with books growing up; my parents believed in education but didn’t collect books themselves or read a whole lot.
I was introduced to reading by some European emigre professors teaching at Cal State Chico. One was an exile from Czech Communism, another was from Hungary. They were very inspirational; they showed me that books are a part of a life well-lived.
One of the professors was named Ivan Svitak, a philosophy professor. He brought ideas to life for an emerging intellect. We would go out and have beers and talk about ideas. It was a mystery that was unveiled.
I started reading all over the place--Freud and Jung. I never liked the idea of being confined to one category. I thought it was wrong to segregate these different disciplines--music, art, philosophy. As a psychology student, I understood more about human nature by reading great literature than from psychology texts.
I get so excited about books and ideas, and I want others to have it too. It’s also a political commitment: I want to change the world. Next year we’re starting a program called READ L.A. We’re getting tutors for the primary grades from our colleges, to help students learn a love of reading at an early age.
More to Read
Sign up for our Book Club newsletter
Get the latest news, events and more from the Los Angeles Times Book Club, and help us get L.A. reading and talking.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.