We know parents shape their children’s reading – but so can aunts, uncles and grandparents, by sharing beloved books
- Written by Emily Grace Baulch, Producer at Ludo Studio & Freelance Editor, The University of Queensland
Over 80% of Australians with children encourage them to read. Children whose parents enjoy reading are 20% more likely to enjoy it too.
My research has found parents aren’t the only family members who play an important role in developing a passion for reading – extended family, from grandparents to siblings, uncles and great-aunts, also influence readers’ connections to books.
I surveyed 160 Australian readers about their home bookshelves and reading habits. More than 80% of them acknowledged the significant influence of family in what and how they read. Reading to children is often the invisible workload of mothers: 95% of mothers read to children, compared to 67% of fathers.
Yet intriguingly, those I surveyed – whose ages ranged from their early 20s to their 70s – collectively talked about books being passed down across eight generations.
Family members were associated with their most valued books – and their identities as readers.
Treasured possessions
Books passed down through generations often become treasured possessions, embodying a shared family history. One person discussed an old hardcover copy of Blinky Bill by Dorothy Wall. Originally given to her father and his siblings by their great-aunt in 1961, the book’s pages are now discoloured and falling out.
“Although I always think of my mother as having been my reading role model,” she wrote, “actually my father had an equally big impact, just in another way.” Her father is a central organising figure on her home bookshelf: she has dedicated a whole shelf to the books he liked.



















