Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We started at 8 and I’m now reading him the Goblet of Fire. At this point, the books are different than the movies. Also, getting very dark so we will probably end here for now.
I’ve heard people say this before, but how do you stop in the middle of the series? E I read the first book aloud to my 8 year old and she was too impatient to find out what happened next, so she checked the second book out of the school library and started reading it the day after we finished the first book. She plowed through the whole series rapidly and would have been devastated if I’d forbidden finishing it. I guess during a pandemic, a kid can’t necessarily visit the school library, but my dd would have begged and pleaded nonstop for the rest of the books.
“I would want to know what happens next also, Larla! But the books start to get a bit scary. I’m eager to read them with you and I know you’re excited. Let’s wait a bit so we can really enjoy them.”
And then find a new series.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Keep in mind that starting in book 4, characters start getting murdered.
+1000
We plan on starting around age 8 and taking it SLOW, so my boys will be old enough by the time we get to those. I also want them to fully comprehend them, not just brag about “reading” them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We started at 8 and I’m now reading him the Goblet of Fire. At this point, the books are different than the movies. Also, getting very dark so we will probably end here for now.
I’ve heard people say this before, but how do you stop in the middle of the series? I read the first book aloud to my 8 year old and she was too impatient to find out what happened next, so she checked the second book out of the school library and started reading it the day after we finished the first book. She plowed through the whole series rapidly and would have been devastated if I’d forbidden finishing it. I guess during a pandemic, a kid can’t necessarily visit the school library, but my dd would have begged and pleaded nonstop for the rest of the books.
Anonymous wrote:I would wait until age seven at least. A lot of it is going to go over their heads now. I only read it aloud to my third graders and up. Try the Narnia books now.
Anonymous wrote:We started at 8 and I’m now reading him the Goblet of Fire. At this point, the books are different than the movies. Also, getting very dark so we will probably end here for now.
Anonymous wrote:Keep in mind that starting in book 4, characters start getting murdered.
Anonymous wrote:It’s fine. By 6, DD was reading them herself.