The need that the
more ordinary, direct, and personal experience of the child shall
furnish problems, motives, and interests that necessitate
recourse to books for their solution, satisfaction, and pursuit.
Otherwise, the child approaches the book without intellectual
hunger, without alertness, without a questioning attitude, and
the result is the one so deplorably common: such abject
dependence upon books as weakens and cripples vigor of thought
and inquiry, combined with reading for mere random stimulation of
fancy, emotional indulgence, and flight from the world of reality
into a make-belief land.