BEDSIDE READING
by Cathy Maxwell
I've been writing late into the evening. I'm tired and ready for bed.
I climb the stairs. There's a crack of light under my fifteen year old
daughter's bedroom door.
She's reading. She has started a book she can't put down . . . and
memories rush back to me of nights I've been unable to close a book,
turn off the light, and leave the characters behind, nights when the
very best use of my time was to stay up until two reading.
Chelsea started reading romance last year.
My mother, an avid romance reader, said, "She's too young. I don't
know what I think about this."
I shrug. "During the opening teaser of her favorite television show
the characters discussed multiple orgasms. I want her to read about
valid relationships: relationships that honor commitment, women who
are strong characters with goals, and where sex is a healthy thing."
Mother thinks about this a moment. "Tell her to read Nora Roberts."
That was the beginning. The best part of parenting is being a mentor.
It's my responsibility to introduce her to good music, food, entertainment,
and, most important, my favorite romance authors. Jennifer Blake, Maggie
Osborne/Margaret St. George, Johanna Lindsey, Tom and Sharon Curtis,
Anne Stuart, Theresa Weir, Georgette Heyer, the list goes on and on.
And it isn't just the authors but the books, the stories.
"Read SURRENDER IN SCARLET by Patricia Camden."
"Is it good?" Chelsea asks.
"Perfect."
"What about this?" She holds up a Karen Robards. TIGER'S EYE.
"Must read," I tell her.
Then there is THE WOLF'S HOUR by Robert McCammon. I mean to give it
to her but end up re-reading it myself. Same with Spencer's HUMMINGBIRD
. . . and Kinsale's PRINCE OF MIDNIGHT, Woodiwiss's SHANNA and THE WOLF
AND THE DOVE. Classics, I tell her, and she dutifully reads. The bookshelf
in her room is full.
"What do you have to read?" Chelsea asks, rummaging through the books
in my office. She spies the pile I purchased that afternoon from the
book store. Pamela Morsi's NO ORDINARY PRINCESS and Robin Lee Hatcher's
DEAR LADY disappear into her room.
When I wanted to read Bonnie Tucker's HANNAH'S HUNKS. I couldn't find
it until I got down on my hands and knees and dug around under Chelsea's
bed. I discover my planned reading for the last two months under there.
We read other things of course. I'd walk barefoot across cut glass
to read Florence King and I'm still mourning the death of Mike Royko.
Researching my next book, I read VANISHING CORNWALL by Daphne du Maurier
which kicked off a du Maurier fiction streak. Then there is Dick Francis
and Bernard Cornwall. Chelsea has been feasting on Ray Bradbury. A school
assignment of FARNHEIT 451 has sent us both pell-mell after his short
stories.
It's something we share, this love of a good tale. It's common ground
for when the parent/teen stuff gets to be too much. Here is a way of
teaching her the values I hold important without the lectures. Through
Hatcher, Roberts, Spencer, and all the others, she learns what makes
a relationship work, that making mistakes isn't the end of the world,
and that like Scarlett said, there will always be a tomorrow.
One night, she appeared at my office door, WHITNEY MY LOVE in her hand.
"I just love happy endings," she said with a satisfied sigh . . . and
I understood exactly what she meant: the hero and heroine are safe in
each other's arms, the villains of the world receive justice, and love
gives meaning to life.
I wish for each of my children lives full of such happy endings.
So, I don't knock on Chelsea's door and tell her "light's out." Not
just yet. I can let her have a half hour more, and I go to my room to
unwind and lose myself in a good book.

Cathy Maxwell is the author of A SEDUCTION AT CHRISTMAS ,
a November 2008 release from Avon Books.