• From Aidyn & Quinn: A Quick Voice Note for Tonight, 6PM local
    Aug 31 2025

    Tonight, 6PM local — Reading To Connect Day is here 📚💕

    It’s happening. Families around the world are already gathering — and tonight at 6PM your local time, it’s your turn.

    Reading To Connect Day™ was born from something simple: me and my son Aidyn choosing to read for connection over performance. That choice has grown into proclamations from cities and counties, support from authors, and families across the world saying yes to pausing together.

    In this short episode, Aidyn and I share exactly what to do tonight, why it matters, and how to join the movement.

    Key Topics:

    What Reading To Connect Day™ is (and isn’t)

    How to join in at 6PM local — no rules, no pressure

    Simple ways to post and share your moment so other families feel encouraged

    Gratitude for our giveaway partners, authors, and proclamations already in place

    Why reading together builds connection, not performance

    Links:🔹 Enter the giveaway: ReadingToConnect.com/Day🔹 Share page + graphics: ReadingToConnect.com/Day/Share-RTC-Day📬 Contact: quinn@readingtoconnect.com



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    2 min
  • It’s happening.
    Aug 1 2025

    Announcing the first-ever Reading To Connect Day™

    I didn’t plan to create a holiday.

    I just wanted families to feel safe again—to pause, not perform. To read like it mattered beyond the reading. And when I started sharing our story, something happened.

    Parents from everywhere started joining in. Not for a program. Not for a prize.

    For a moment.

    In this episode, I’m announcing something we’ve been building toward all along—Reading To Connect Day. It’s not a trend. It’s not a hashtag. It’s a return. And this time, it’s happening together.

    Key Topics:

    - Why “just one moment” might be the most powerful thing we offer

    - How a late-night scheduling push revealed a deeper purpose

    - The shift from performance-based reading to legacy-based connection

    - What happens at 6PM in every time zone on the last Sunday in August

    - How you can be part of a global pause—without needing to perform

    Links:

    🔹 Reading To Connect Day Info + Share PageEverything you need to join (or invite someone else to)

    📬 Contact: quinn@readingtoconnect.com



    This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit readingtoconnect.substack.com/subscribe
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    7 min
  • For some... it's deeper than being tired
    Jul 15 2025

    For Some, It’s Deeper Than Being TiredWhy one wrong math answer made her stop reading to her son.

    She helped him with his math.She got it wrong.It became his lowest grade of the year.So she stopped reading with him.

    It wasn’t even a reading moment. But it made her feel like her voice didn’t matter—and that maybe she was holding him back.

    This episode isn’t about math. It’s about what we’ve done to reading.And why tired is often just code for something deeper.

    Key Topics:

    The invisible shame many parents carry when it comes to reading

    How we’ve trained families to believe reading is academic, not relational

    What gets lost when we make reading about scores instead of story

    Why I created The Listening Room—and what it’s really for

    A personal moment I didn’t expect to uncover on air

    Links:

    🔹 What Do You Need Right Now? A quiet room for parents who feel far from readinghttps://readingtoconnect.com/what-do-you-need

    🔹 ENGAGE Shared Reading Manifesto Not about performance. About presence.https://readingtoconnect.com/engaged-shared-reading/

    🔹 Reading To Connect The movement. The method. The invitation.https://readingtoconnect.com/

    📬 Connect: quinn@readingtoconnect.com

    Because you're not the problem.

    And it’s okay to begin again.



    This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit readingtoconnect.substack.com/subscribe
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    9 min
  • Staying Connected: Friendship, Challenges, and the Stories That Help Us Understand
    Mar 12 2025

    Join me in this episode of Reading To Connect as I sit down with Hope Larson, New York Times bestselling and multi-Eisner award-winning cartoonist, to talk about her new middle-grade graphic novel, Very Bad at Math.

    We dive into the power of shared reading experiences, the impact of learning differences like dyscalculia, and how books can help kids feel seen. Hope opens up about her personal struggles with math, the pressure of perfectionism, and how her own experiences shaped Verity, the book’s protagonist. We also explore friendship dynamics in middle school, the challenges of asking for help, and why kids' interests—including comics and pop culture—are key to connection.

    What You’ll Learn:

    📚 How shared reading (even with older kids) creates powerful bonding moments🧠 What dyscalculia is and how it impacts kids—and why stories like Very Bad at Math matter💡 How books can help kids navigate friendship struggles, self-doubt, and big emotions🎨 The role of comics and graphic novels in engaging reluctant readers

    This episode is a reminder that books are more than just stories—they’re tools for understanding ourselves, each other, and the world. Very Bad at Math isn’t just about struggling with numbers; it’s about learning to ask for help, embracing your strengths, and knowing that you are more than your struggles.

    Let me know what moments stood out to you! 📚💕



    This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit readingtoconnect.substack.com/subscribe
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    31 min
  • When I Hear Spirituals: A Children’s Book Rooted in the Beauty and Deep History of Black Music
    Feb 28 2025

    Join me in this episode of Reading To Connect as I sit down with Cheryl Willis Hudson, author of When I Hear Spirituals and co-founder of Just Us Books, to explore how music, storytelling, and Black history come together in children’s books.

    We dive into the rich legacy of spirituals, how they carry the voices of our ancestors, and why these songs continue to resonate across generations. Cheryl shares her journey in children's publishing, the origins of Just Us Books, and the ongoing fight for Black representation in literature. We also discuss how parents can use books and music to create powerful moments of connection with their children.

    What You’ll Learn:

    - How spirituals serve as a bridge between history, culture, and storytelling in children’s books- The importance of Black-owned publishing and why Just Us Books was founded- Why representation in children’s literature goes beyond visibility—it’s about preserving history- How parents and educators can use books and music to spark deeper conversations with kids

    Tune in to discover how music, history, and storytelling come together to empower young readers and ensure that our stories—and our voices—are passed down for generations to come.

    Let me know what moments stood out to you! 📚💕



    This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit readingtoconnect.substack.com/subscribe
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    42 min
  • A 10-Year-Old’s Take on Trump: What Sandcastles Teach Us About Power and the Power of Story
    Feb 14 2025

    Can Stories Build a More Just World for Our Children?

    In this heartfelt episode, I share a powerful conversation with my 10-year-old son, Aidyn, sparked during our morning drive to school. His reflection on Donald Trump’s proposal to eliminate the Department of Education stopped me in my tracks:

    “What does he think America is? His playbox? All he’s doing is building up sandcastles.”

    To Aidyn, sandcastles are fleeting—ego-driven creations that crumble with the tide. And in that moment, I realized: His ability to see power so clearly didn’t come from nowhere—it came from stories.

    Books have been our bridge to understanding justice, humanity, and the weight of power. Together, we’ve explored how power can lift or destroy, and how justice demands more than showmanship—it demands care, courage, and connection.

    But this conversation isn’t just about politics—it’s about parenting. It’s about how we prepare our children, especially Black children, to navigate a world that often misjudges them. Through stories, Aidyn has learned to recognize injustice, challenge false narratives, and see beyond fear-laden stereotypes to the truth.

    Because storytelling isn’t just an art—it’s a tool for connection and change.

    In this episode, I also draw from the wisdom of:📚 Deepa Iyer, author of We Are the Builders, who reminds us that building a just world requires every one of us to understand our roles and responsibilities.📚 Rio Cortez, author of The ABCs of Black History & The ABCs of Women's History, who urges us to know and share our histories with our children, ensuring their stories are rooted in truth.

    And through The ENGAGE Method, I share how you can turn reading time with your child into a powerful tool for connection and growth—because every story you share becomes a brick in the foundation of their future.

    So, let’s build something that lasts. Not sandcastles, but legacies—strong, enduring, and just.

    Listen Now and Start Building:

    🔗 Deepa Iyer’s Episode – We Are the Builders - Building the Future

    🔗 Rio Cortez’s Episode – The ABCs of Black History & The ABCs of Women's History - Resisting Erasure

    🔗 Explore The ENGAGE Method – Build Lasting Bonds Through Reading



    This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit readingtoconnect.substack.com/subscribe
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    8 min
  • Resisting Erasure: The Power of Black Stories & Women’s History in Children’s Books
    Feb 12 2025

    Join me in this episode of Reading To Connect as I sit down with Rio Cortez, author of The ABCs of Black History and The ABCs of Women’s History, to explore how children’s books can resist erasure and bring diverse voices to the forefront of history.

    We dive into the power of representation in children’s literature, the thought process behind selecting historical figures, and the ways parents can use books to spark meaningful conversations about history, justice, and identity. Rio shares her journey as a poet and author, the impact of her work in classrooms, and how books can empower young readers to see themselves in history.

    What You’ll Learn:

    - How The ABCs of Black History and The ABCs of Women’s History challenge traditional narratives and center diverse voices.- The process of choosing historical figures for children’s books—and making peace with who gets left out.- How parents and caregivers can use books as tools for deeper conversations with their kids.

    Tune in to discover how we can use books to ensure our stories—and our children’s—are seen, heard, and celebrated.



    This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit readingtoconnect.substack.com/subscribe
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    37 min