Molly's birthday is coming up
Aug. 10th, 2007 12:00 am...and she informed me tonight that she wants books for her birthday. I asked her why she wants books as a gift when we go to the library every week, and she said that she wants me to get her books she would enjoy re-reading.
So I am soliciting suggestions. She's currently a big fan of Nancy Drew and Trixie Belden. She's read The Wizard of Oz twice. I'm thinking about getting her a nice edition of Little Women, but other suggestions are welcomed. What did you read over and over and over as a kid?
The books I read over and over as a kid are mostly already on Molly's shelves. Some she's read and enjoyed (A Little Princess); others she's picked up and put down without reading very far (A Wrinkle in Time), and some she's ignored so far (The Westing Game, The Witch of Blackbird Pond, Emily of New Moon.)
So I am soliciting suggestions. She's currently a big fan of Nancy Drew and Trixie Belden. She's read The Wizard of Oz twice. I'm thinking about getting her a nice edition of Little Women, but other suggestions are welcomed. What did you read over and over and over as a kid?
The books I read over and over as a kid are mostly already on Molly's shelves. Some she's read and enjoyed (A Little Princess); others she's picked up and put down without reading very far (A Wrinkle in Time), and some she's ignored so far (The Westing Game, The Witch of Blackbird Pond, Emily of New Moon.)
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Date: 2007-08-10 05:19 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-08-10 06:03 am (UTC)The rest of the Baum-written Oz books.
Narnia.
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Date: 2007-08-10 06:27 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-08-10 06:48 am (UTC)My reading tastes as a child were quite different from Molly's. My aunt gave me a big box of her old books, with _Little Women_ and a fair few sequels. I don't think I managed more than a few chapters until I was in high school. There were also a lot of Nancy Drew books in the box, and I never found those readable at all. The books in that box I reread a lot were _Black Beauty_, _Charlotte's Web_, and _Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm_.
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Date: 2007-08-10 07:16 am (UTC)I really liked books of fairy tales.
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Date: 2007-08-10 07:32 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-08-10 07:49 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-08-10 07:50 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-08-10 07:56 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-08-10 10:42 am (UTC)The Phantom Tollbooth, by Norman Juster.
The Borrowers series, by Mary Norton.
Hmmm... I'll think some more...
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Date: 2007-08-10 11:25 am (UTC)Also, Greek mythology. Does she do nonfiction? I had Bulfinch's because I was hardcore that way, but there's D'Aulaire's and stuff if you don't think she'll go for it.
Also, your friendly neighborhood children's librarian.
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Date: 2007-08-10 11:30 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-08-10 11:31 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-08-10 11:44 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-08-10 12:27 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-08-10 12:47 pm (UTC)The Trumpet of the Swan was another favorite of mine when I was about her age (I always liked it better than Charlotte's Web or Stuart Little).
And there's the Little House books, too. Which have aged surprisingly well, but you'd do best to get copies sooner rather than later, because the stinking publisher is going to be getting rid of the Garth Williams illustrations in the paperbacks at some point (BLASPHEMY).
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Date: 2007-08-10 12:49 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-08-10 12:59 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-08-10 02:00 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-08-10 02:03 pm (UTC)That was also the year I read the abridged-for-children Jane Eyre, which I think I've mentioned before that I don't recommend for seven-year-olds ...
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Date: 2007-08-10 02:05 pm (UTC)BLASPHEMY is right! What are they thinking??
My aunt just got DD the Little House books for her birthday, and now that I hear this I'm very much relieved that we didn't wait another couple of years.
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Date: 2007-08-10 02:07 pm (UTC)I also couldn't believe what complete rubbish The Five Little Peppers... turned out to be, with every character bursting into tears half a dozen times in every chapter. Very disappointing.
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Date: 2007-08-10 02:09 pm (UTC)What I need to do is start buying the books in hardback--I actually don't currently own a set, which is also blasphemy.
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Date: 2007-08-10 03:15 pm (UTC)Walter Farley - check
Lloyd Alexander's Prydain - check
Little House - check
Marguerite Henry - check
Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of NIMH - check
Trumpet of the Swan - check
Black Beauty - check
and unmentioned so far:
Swiss Family Robinson (yes, sexist, but I had decided by then that I was going to grow up to be a boy, so it didn't bother me)
the Moomintroll books, especially Finn Family Moomintroll and Comet in Moominland.
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Date: 2007-08-10 03:16 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-08-10 06:08 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-08-10 06:54 pm (UTC)James and the Giant Peach
The Hobbit
The Story of King Arthur and his Knights by Howard Pyle
The Mad Scientists' Club by Bertrand R. Brinley and Charles Geer
Alice's Adventures Underground
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Date: 2007-08-10 09:19 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-08-10 11:02 pm (UTC)New Books: My favorite new book at the moment is The Shadow Thieves (http://www.amazon.com/Shadow-Thieves-Cronus-Chronicles/dp/141690588X/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1/104-9482201-8387132?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1186786838&sr=8-1), by Ann Ursu. It is smart and brilliantly written, and wonderful, and while it has a sequel, it doesn't end with a cliffhanger. I really can't recommend it enough.
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Date: 2007-08-11 12:40 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-08-11 01:09 am (UTC)Does she get the same favorites over and over again from the library? Because I did, and would have loved to own copies of those titles. (I mostly do now, but it took me years to find some of them.)
How about Pat Wrede's Dragon series? And some Diana Wynne Jones?
Frankly, most of what I loved as a kid makes me cringe at least a little when I read it now. Eilonwy is pretty much a Disney princess, and Meg Murry is a whiner. The Little House books are interesting as a view of Midwestern history, complete with the racist bits. Which is not to say I don't love them anymore, but I've spent decades trying to get ideas out of my brain that I absorbed from books when I was a kid. And I'm thinking about that, because lots of posts on my friends page this week are talking about IBARW. We should be careful what we pour into those porous little brains.
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Date: 2007-08-11 01:11 am (UTC)I don't believe we currently have Sylvie and Bruno though...
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Date: 2007-08-11 01:40 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-08-11 02:01 am (UTC)The "porous brains" and "racist children's books" issue is a big one for me, and honestly, I am not sure how to deal with it. Molly reads a LOT of children's books that were written in the 1950s and 1960s, because they tend to hit her level just right. They're meaty enough to be interesting, but written for her sensibility (no sex, no graphic violence, no incomprehensible themes like drug addiction...)
For the most part, black people are simply absent from these books. Which is not optimal, but when we're talking about books written by white people in the 1950s, probably just as well. But Native Americans are frequently present. What's really interesting is that the really overt vicious crap like the open bigotry in the Little House books is relatively easy to address because it's so obvious in its evil. What stymies me are the books that are written from a pro-Native-American perspective by writers in an era that did not understand that patronizing depictions of noble savages who are saved by ten-year-old children (see, for example, the Great Brain series) are also seriously problematic. How do you even begin to explain this issue to a six-year-old? But Molly reads VORACIOUSLY and this problem crops up EVERYWHERE. And I don't like censoring her reading, aside from noting when a book might be pretty disturbing or scary. And the Great Brain series is fabulous, and so are many of the other books that have similar problems. (Caddie Woodlawn, for example.)
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Date: 2007-08-11 03:03 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-08-11 03:18 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-08-11 03:21 am (UTC)Lois Lowry & Jean Little (the first will be easy to find, but not the second--I loved the Little books in elementary school, and they stand up well to re-reading (and she's kept on writing more).
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Date: 2007-08-11 03:31 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-08-11 03:43 am (UTC)Jean Little -- we have two of her books, both of them memoirs, basically. Molly hasn't read them yet.
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Date: 2007-08-11 04:39 am (UTC)wil
After <i>Half Magic</i>
Date: 2007-08-11 01:06 pm (UTC)I forget, has she already been introduced to the Railway Children?
AHA!
Date: 2007-08-11 01:19 pm (UTC)I had Norse Gods and Giants as a kid and my dad gave my copy away. I had basically given up any hope of getting a copy again (since, last time I checked, it was out of print and cheap collectors' copies were $75 - that was in 2002 or so)
But now, armed with the new title, I see that it's in print and available for a price I'd be willing to pay from Amazon.
Re: AHA!
Date: 2007-08-11 01:37 pm (UTC)Re: After <i>Half Magic</i>
Date: 2007-08-11 02:15 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-08-11 11:39 pm (UTC)