Salisbury’s Barton a star at Reader’s Digest

SALISBURY — Pat Barton’s story of growing up in Hawaii as a freckle-faced American child with a Japanese babysitter, a Filipino gardener and a Chinese housekeeper, is one of the 150-word life stories being considered for publication in an upcoming issue of Reader’s Digest magazine.A book, “Life ... The Reader’s Digest Version” (part of a new series) creates what the company calls “a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for people’s personal stories to be widely read and for the opportunity of one story to be published in Reader’s Digest.”Stories will be voted on by readers; Digest editors will make the ultimate selections. Submissions and voting can be done online at www.facebook.com/ReadersDigest.For her part, Barton was surprised to learn her entry, “Concerning Learning To Read,” had attracted any attention.“I had no idea,” she said. “I did it for fun. I said to myself, ‘Self, anything’s worth a shot.’”The $1,000 prize would come in handy, she said.The story tells of the very young Barton going to see a samurai movie in Japanese (with English subtitles) with the babysitter and housekeeper.The housekeeper didn’t understand the soundtrack or the subtitles, Barton wrote. “It didn’t matter though, because in our world we all had an equally lovely time!”

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