"I love to read aloud"
About this Quote
A small, almost childlike confession that quietly declares a philosophy of storytelling. Cornelia Funke isn’t praising reading as a private virtue; she’s tipping her hand toward performance, breath, and company. “Read aloud” turns literature from an individual act of consumption into an event: sound waves, timing, suspense held in a room. It’s a line that fits an author whose work (Inkheart especially) treats books as portals and voices as keys. Funke’s fiction repeatedly literalizes the idea that spoken words can change reality; here, the subtext is that language is most alive when it leaves the page.
The intent feels practical and devotional at once. Funke is known for writing with a strong oral cadence - sentences that move, cliffhangers that land, dialogue that begs to be voiced. Loving to read aloud is also a craft statement: if a paragraph stumbles when spoken, it probably stumbles on the page. Many children’s and YA writers draft with the ear, not just the eye, because their audience often meets stories through parents, teachers, librarians, and audiobooks.
Context matters: Funke is a German author whose global readership grew alongside a late-90s/2000s boom in children’s fantasy, when reading culture was being defended against screens. “I love to read aloud” is a gentle rebuttal to the idea that books are solitary, old-fashioned, or silent. It frames reading as social technology, a way to build attention, intimacy, and shared imagination - the kind that can still compete, because it’s not just content. It’s a human voice in real time.
The intent feels practical and devotional at once. Funke is known for writing with a strong oral cadence - sentences that move, cliffhangers that land, dialogue that begs to be voiced. Loving to read aloud is also a craft statement: if a paragraph stumbles when spoken, it probably stumbles on the page. Many children’s and YA writers draft with the ear, not just the eye, because their audience often meets stories through parents, teachers, librarians, and audiobooks.
Context matters: Funke is a German author whose global readership grew alongside a late-90s/2000s boom in children’s fantasy, when reading culture was being defended against screens. “I love to read aloud” is a gentle rebuttal to the idea that books are solitary, old-fashioned, or silent. It frames reading as social technology, a way to build attention, intimacy, and shared imagination - the kind that can still compete, because it’s not just content. It’s a human voice in real time.
Quote Details
| Topic | Book |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
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