Anonymous wrote:I read plenty of the classics when I was a young, but most of my favorite books were what I would consider light reading today.
As a young boy, I loved all the Gordon Korman books from the "MacDonald Hall" series to my favorite "I Want to Go Home". I'm not sure I would really enjoy reading those again today. I'll keep the memories though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mixed-up Files is a terrific book. It totally held up for me and both my kids loved it.
Other favorites from my childhood that I love to reread (and that my kids also loved):
Charlotte' Web
The Trumpet of the Swan
The Little House books
The Melendy books (The Saturdays, The Four-Story Mistake, Then There Were Five, Spider Web for Two)
The Wizard of Oz
Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry
How to Eat Fried Worms
The Secret Garden
My Side of the Mountain
Harriet the Spy
The Great Brain books
The Witch of Blackbird Pond
Tisha
Cheaper by the Dozen
The Grounding of Group Six
The Ghost of Dibble Hollow
Caddie Woodlawn
Just about anything by Beverly Cleary
I'm the Mixed-Up Files fan from above. Totally agree with you about Charlotte and Beverly Cleary books. For Cleary fans, her memoir, A Girl from Yam Hill, is illuminating and beautifully written.
Just wondering . . for those who read Mixed-Up Files and Are You There , God?, did the NYC suburban setting influence your feelings about the books? I grew up in NJ suburbs (kinda -- Princeton), and the Mixed-Up Files felt a lot like my childhood. Less so, Are You There, God?; though the movie brought back a rush of memories.
Anonymous wrote:This Washington Post column, How Anne of Green Gables Got Me Through Grief, made me cry. But it really shows how some of the childhood books we read resonate our entire lives. Warning, it is about a stillbirth.
Gift link https://wapo.st/4sRZ3LS
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mixed-up Files is a terrific book. It totally held up for me and both my kids loved it.
Other favorites from my childhood that I love to reread (and that my kids also loved):
Charlotte' Web
The Trumpet of the Swan
The Little House books
The Melendy books (The Saturdays, The Four-Story Mistake, Then There Were Five, Spider Web for Two)
The Wizard of Oz
Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry
How to Eat Fried Worms
The Secret Garden
My Side of the Mountain
Harriet the Spy
The Great Brain books
The Witch of Blackbird Pond
Tisha
Cheaper by the Dozen
The Grounding of Group Six
The Ghost of Dibble Hollow
Caddie Woodlawn
Just about anything by Beverly Cleary
I'm the Mixed-Up Files fan from above. Totally agree with you about Charlotte and Beverly Cleary books. For Cleary fans, her memoir, A Girl from Yam Hill, is illuminating and beautifully written.
Just wondering . . for those who read Mixed-Up Files and Are You There , God?, did the NYC suburban setting influence your feelings about the books? I grew up in NJ suburbs (kinda -- Princeton), and the Mixed-Up Files felt a lot like my childhood. Less so, Are You There, God?; though the movie brought back a rush of memories.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anne of Green Gables stood the test of time--was actually surprised at how well-written and funny it was reading as an adult. (Montgomery's other books, not so much...)
Agree that Wrinkle in Time was a bit dull (and my kids were also not at all into it). Similarly, when listening to Charlie and the Chocolate Factory with the family on audiobook, I was surprised at how loooong it took for Charlie to actually get to the factory--that was basically the only part I remember from my childhood read lol. I had to basically push the kids to make it to that point (and then DS at least really enjoyed it).
I personally enjoyed reading some of the original Winnie the Pooh books to my kids (again they were not particularly into it), but was struck by how much the writing did not really seem directed to kids--more to adults remembering childhood.
Interesting you say that about Montgomery. Just read Emily of New Moon to my boys and we all loved it. First time I read any of her books.
I went back and read many books in the "Anne" series, some to my kids, and found that there was a bit of a drop off in quality after Anne of Avonlea (even, sadly, Anne of the Island, which was my absolute fav as a girl). I liked the Emily books too when I read them as a preteen, but I was afraid they would be too earnest and precious upon re-reading now. But maybe I should? One of the nice things about Anne of Green Gables is its sort of "double perspective"--it both takes Anne's travails seriously enough to be meaningful to a kid but clearly depicts the humor in many of them (to appeal to an adult).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anne of Green Gables stood the test of time--was actually surprised at how well-written and funny it was reading as an adult. (Montgomery's other books, not so much...)
Agree that Wrinkle in Time was a bit dull (and my kids were also not at all into it). Similarly, when listening to Charlie and the Chocolate Factory with the family on audiobook, I was surprised at how loooong it took for Charlie to actually get to the factory--that was basically the only part I remember from my childhood read lol. I had to basically push the kids to make it to that point (and then DS at least really enjoyed it).
I personally enjoyed reading some of the original Winnie the Pooh books to my kids (again they were not particularly into it), but was struck by how much the writing did not really seem directed to kids--more to adults remembering childhood.
Interesting you say that about Montgomery. Just read Emily of New Moon to my boys and we all loved it. First time I read any of her books.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I loved Island of the Blue Dolphins when I read it again a couple of years ago. Also Hatchet.
We read the full Narnia series to our kids. I only remember reading The Lion, The Witch, and The Wardrobe as a kid, so most of the series was new to me. Liked some better than others, but overall the series was worth reading.
I was obsessed with these "kid alone in the wilderness" books as a kid.
Others in this genre:
Julie of the Wolves
Call It Courage
For an adult version:
Last of the Breed by Louis L’Amour
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I loved Island of the Blue Dolphins when I read it again a couple of years ago. Also Hatchet.
We read the full Narnia series to our kids. I only remember reading The Lion, The Witch, and The Wardrobe as a kid, so most of the series was new to me. Liked some better than others, but overall the series was worth reading.
I was obsessed with these "kid alone in the wilderness" books as a kid.
Anonymous wrote:I loved Island of the Blue Dolphins when I read it again a couple of years ago. Also Hatchet.
We read the full Narnia series to our kids. I only remember reading The Lion, The Witch, and The Wardrobe as a kid, so most of the series was new to me. Liked some better than others, but overall the series was worth reading.
Anonymous wrote:Re-reading Westing Game with my kid right now and IMO it still slaps! I’m curious about Phantom Tollbooth.