Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids like repetitive books. I remember Goosebumps and the My Teacher Is An Alien and Babysitter Little Sister and American Girl books being obsessively read in my elementary school. Get them hooked on stuff you like, but if you can find something with a long slightly repetitive series you’ll have better luck displacing the magic treehouses of the world.
I distinctly remember the age where I realized all the Redwall books I adored were actually virtually identical books. I try to read my kid Good Books, but I also don't begrudge her her crap. Older generations had their formulaic Hardy Boys and Happy Hollisters and this generation has Dogman. Most adults don't read only great literature either.
+1. I remember reading Happy Hollisters as a kid and loving it (I'm not actually that old, we found it in some used bookstore somewhere). My mom gave it to me and I looked through it again and was pretty horrified. The kids were so mean! It was so poorly written!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm sure your parents thought the Sweet Valley High and Babysitter's Club stuff that you read as a child were crap, too, LOL!
Mine absolutely did!
Look, if kids are reading for enjoyment, that is a win. I read with my older elementary kids most nights, and that’s where we tackle harder books together- but I’m fine with them reading graphic novels and everything else as long as they are reading.
Anonymous wrote:I'm sure your parents thought the Sweet Valley High and Babysitter's Club stuff that you read as a child were crap, too, LOL!
Anonymous wrote:I have an elementary aged reader and maybe it’s snobby, but I’m shocked at the crap that these kids read. They are encouraged BY TEACHERS and LIBRARIANS to read this crap.
Dog Man, Magic Treehouse, The Bad Guys, Unicorn Diaries. So many spelling and grammar errors. So much bad writing.
I remember reading Wayside School is Falling Down and Judy Blume’s Fudge books. They were a little junky, but also had great qualities that I don’t see in today’s popular titles.
What did you read as a younger reader? And what do you think about what your kid is reading? Am I just a snob?
Anonymous wrote:I have an elementary aged reader and maybe it’s snobby, but I’m shocked at the crap that these kids read. They are encouraged BY TEACHERS and LIBRARIANS to read this crap.
Dog Man, Magic Treehouse, The Bad Guys, Unicorn Diaries. So many spelling and grammar errors. So much bad writing.
I remember reading Wayside School is Falling Down and Judy Blume’s Fudge books. They were a little junky, but also had great qualities that I don’t see in today’s popular titles.
What did you read as a younger reader? And what do you think about what your kid is reading? Am I just a snob?