Anonymous wrote:Thanks for all the great suggestions here! We have always read together--longer, more advanced literature of course- and now I think i will try requesting that he read from his book for 30 mins or so before i read to him.
Anonymous wrote:My 8 year old DS likes the Warriors series by Erin Hunter.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd bring DS to the library and get him engaged in finding books with your assistance. You may get a better idea of wbat appeals to him. I agree re the nonfiction suggestion - some kids are just not fiction readers. Also think about his interests. My DS is not interested in fantasy either which eliminates many of the popular series, but he likes sports and humor. Books he liked include Dan Gutman's sports books, Tales of a Fourth Grade Nothing/Superfudge/etc., Sideways Stories from Wayside School, Johanna Hurwitz books like Class Clown. He also likes mysteries like Capitol Mysteries and, as dated as they are, the Hardy Boys mysteries.
+ 1
Spend an hour or two browsing together at a library or a bookstore with a knowledgable staff, then check out a few things together and have a "family read" for an hour....
Anonymous wrote:I'd bring DS to the library and get him engaged in finding books with your assistance. You may get a better idea of wbat appeals to him. I agree re the nonfiction suggestion - some kids are just not fiction readers. Also think about his interests. My DS is not interested in fantasy either which eliminates many of the popular series, but he likes sports and humor. Books he liked include Dan Gutman's sports books, Tales of a Fourth Grade Nothing/Superfudge/etc., Sideways Stories from Wayside School, Johanna Hurwitz books like Class Clown. He also likes mysteries like Capitol Mysteries and, as dated as they are, the Hardy Boys mysteries.
Anonymous wrote:We seem to have topped out here. Reading was progressing nicely- until the "transitional readers" stage, i.e. longer books w/ fewer illustrations, such as magic tree house, humphrey hamster, literally dozens of similar-stage books. I know this is a critical juncture for readers - moving onto longer, more meaty books. How can we help? Or is this where it ends? He is not competitive so I am not sure book-reading competitions would work. TIA