Sustained reading is what finally pushes a learner from intermediate to advanced — yet most southern Spanish learners never quite get there because the texts they meet are either too short, written in textbook Castilian, or stripped of regional flavour. Andalusian Reading Practice is built specifically for that climb. The book opens at A2-easy with a barely-three-paragraph scene of a Sevillian street vendor calling out churros before sunrise, then escalates: a malentendido unfolding over coffee at a wedding in the Sierra de Aracena, an abuela's recollection of her pueblo blanco childhood, an undergraduate's anxious first afternoon at the Universidad de Granada, two pages from the deck of a sardine boat working out of Sanlúcar, a real-feel newspaper article about a town's water-rationing summer, a personal essay on the vuelta del emigrante, a tour-guide's walk-through of the Mezquita-Catedral, an Alpujarra folk tale told the old way, a chef's commentary alongside a recipe for salmorejo, an opinion column on the café culture of the south, an overheard reunion between two friends who have not met since 2005, and a closing essay on what makes the southern voice of Spanish its own thing. Each text appears with side-by-side English, a glossary keyed to the page, and a short comprehension exercise; the back matter holds the consolidated glossary, the full answer key, and a re-reading rotation chart. This book was generated using AI tools and reviewed by the Bellwick Language Institute editorial team.