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Time to read

By The Associated Press | China Daily | Updated: 2014-10-31 08:04

 Time to read

Pop singer Taylor Swift is on a tour to promote her new album 1989. Adrian Sanchez-gonzalez / Agence France-Presse

Singing star Taylor Swift savors words on paper and the 'amazing' chance to write more than songs, she tells The Associated Press in New York.

Who says kids don't read? Not Taylor Swift.

The superstar made a stop on Tuesday night on her busy tour promoting her new album to share her passion for reading and writing with a gaggle of New York City public school kids-and 100 more giggling on computer screens via Skype from classrooms in Michigan and California.

Swift, whose 1989 was expected to debut at No 1 next week, is a lifelong lover of books and writing, particularly songwriting, but she says after chatting with the tweens and teens at Scholastic that she isn't ruling out other writing projects.

She's already an unpublished novelist! At 13 or 14, she wrote a 400-page book based on her life and friends, whom she had left behind during a summer away with her family.

"But since then, I've discovered music and that's the form of writing that inspires me the most. It's not to say that I wouldn't expand the mediums and the ways that I choose to write," Swift says. "What if I end up writing a script or a book, or a book of poetry or something? That would be so amazing."

Her meet up with the kids, six surrounding her on cozy couches at the book publisher's Soho headquarters, was turned into a 30-minute video available at Scholastic.com that has her urging more young people to "open a world of possible" through books.

The students on Skype had made signs declaring the superstar awesome. The in person New Yorkers offered Swift their book recommendations. Among them: The Glass Castle by Jeannette Walls and Out of My Mind by Sharon Draper.

And Harry Potter, natch.

The book suggestions were timely for Swift as she prepares for a few lengthy flights. Making and promoting her fifth album has left her out of the loop on what to read, she says.

And while now, at 24, she feels like the older sister or a kindly aunt to kids she has spent time with at Scholastic for several years, she has never forgotten what got her interested in books at their age.

"I could read about other characters' feelings and other characters' lives and their triumphs and their downfalls - and it took me to a place that alleviated the pain of my reality, and that's what music does for me," she says.

 

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