National Year of Reading - March
March 31, 2026
2026 is National Year of Reading and we are going all in here at Norwich School! We know reading expands worlds, sharpens minds, and fuels creativity, so let's get inspired! Every month we are focusing on a different genre and hearing from a member of staff about what they like to read, why, when and where! This March it’s Classics and let’s find out why our Librarian, Deborah Goodwin, loves the classics...
Tell us a little bit about the genre; what common themes or elements do you particularly enjoy?
The definition of a classic can feel a bit slippery sometimes, but most people would agree on a few things. It needs to be well written, and it needs to have stood the test of time — enjoyed by and relevant to multiple generations, not just a bestseller. They tend to deal with universal themes like love, loss, or just what it means to be human, which is why you can pick up something written hundreds of years ago and still completely relate to it. The term "Modern classic" usually means post-World War II, but even then, a book needs to have proven itself over time before it earns the label.
Personally, I'm drawn to epic stories — ones that follow a character over years, watching their life unfold. I love getting engrossed in someone else’s life.
What was the book that introduced you to the classics? Was there a particular book or author that made you fall in love with this genre?
As a teenager I read things like The Catcher in the Rye, The Great Gatsby, Animal Farm, and The Diary of Anne Frank. There wasn't as much Young Adult fiction around back then, so I'd raid my parents' bookshelves or borrow from the library. The Catcher in the Rye is probably the one that made me fall in love with reading — I've gone back to lots of times since my teens, which is saying something as I'm not usually a re-reader.
Has your taste in this genre changed over time?
Definitely. I've read a fair bit of war literature — Birdsong, Slaughterhouse-Five, War and Peace, and after that, all the balls and courtships in the classic drawing-room fiction started feeling a bit frivolous in comparison. I still appreciate them, but these days I'm more drawn to big, sweeping epics like Les Misérables, Anna Karenina, or Middlesex by Jeffrey Eugenides. I’m happiest with something that spans generations or continents.
Would you recommend this genre to someone who doesn’t usually read it? Why?
Absolutely — but I'd choose carefully depending on the person! Fantasy fans might love The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, teens into dystopian fiction would probably enjoy Lord of the Flies, and mystery lovers are almost always won over by Agatha Christie. The language can feel like a barrier at first, especially if you're used to modern fiction, so starting with something accessible really helps shake off the idea that classics are somehow hard work.
What do you enjoy most about reading, whether classics or anything else?
Honestly? Switching off. Leaving real life behind for a bit and slowing down to the pace of a book. I've experienced so many different lives through reading, put myself in the shoes of people I'd never otherwise have encountered, and I think that's genuinely changed how I see the world.
When and where is your favourite time and place to read?/ Do you have a favourite reading spot or routine for diving into books?
I'll read anywhere I can grab a few minutes — waiting rooms, trains, park benches, cafés. But if I'm being honest, nothing beats being at home in front of the fire with a book, a cup of tea and a slice of cake. Very unglamorous, but there it is!
Which fictional character would you most like to have a cup of tea with?
That’s a difficult one! Someone who would make me laugh, I think. Probably Charles Pooter from The Diary of a Nobody; he’s pompous and accident-prone but he tries hard and means well. I think I’d enjoy his company. The book was published in 1892 and it's still funny. I'd love to have a cup of tea with him and let him tell me all about his latest home improvement disaster.
Why do you think reading is important?
I think reading builds empathy in a way that's hard to replicate. We're absolutely surrounded by information these days, but there's a big difference between knowing something and truly engaging with it. A book pulls you in completely, whether the world is real or imagined, and somehow makes other people's experiences feel personal in a way that a TikTok never quite can.
Click here to see the monthly Reading List!










