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What is *your* favourite children's book?
Yours, not your kids' ... the one(s) you read as a kid and can still go back to with pleasure?
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The Red Balloon! I still have my circa 1965 copy, all busted spine and mangled. The color pictures smell good. (I cant explain that, but tis true.) I wanted to go hang out with Pascal.
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where the wild things are....i know this has already been discussed, but, it really is my favorite.
Unless you count "the lion the witch and the wardrobe" as a 'kids' book |
I really like "Jamberry", though I haven't been able to find it since we moved.
Other favourites include "Green Eggs and Ham", "The Daddy Book", "Where the Wild Things Are", and "Fox in Socks". Jamey's favourites: "The Daddy Book", "I Spy: Treasure something-something", "The Okay Book" and "Green Eggs and Ham". Lately he also seems to like a particular little "Three Bears" book and the "Airplanes" book. |
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Where the Sidewalk Ends and A Light in the Attic by Shel Silverstein. Both of these books are now on the "banned books" list for very stupid reasons.
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Fox in Socks, hands down.
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Oh yeah, Shel Siliverstein, those great rhymes! There was his other one about the giving tree, that was so sweet.
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whats is your favourite childrens book
Am amazing book called "Elidor" by Alan Garner.
My first sword and sorcery fantasy been a sucker for the genre ever since. www.readingmatters.co.uk/books/elidor |
There was a series of books that followed a girl named "Ramona". At the time, my best friend was named Ramona, so I thought it was cool. :D
The Little House In The Woods books by Laura Ingalls Wilder. (and the show that the books were based on ruled!) I had a series of various Disney books, and they were kept in a pretty cool Mickey Mouse bookholder. I think it was like a book club or something. Charlotte's Web: This was the most CHERISHED book that I could have ever owned. I got the paperback version for Christmas, with the first edition cover on it. Years later, my mother thought it was a good idea to give away some of my childhood books to charity (without telling me). It took me several days before I could speak to her without wanting to strangle her. (my family has this strange, but annoying habit of doing things without telling me.) :angry: |
I read several of the Heinlein "juveniles" when I was in elementary school. I liked most of them and will still read them sometimes today. Although I liked "Between Planets," "Space Cadet," and "The Rolling Stones" very much, the undisputed champion of them all is "Have Space Suit, Will Travel."
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the berinstein bears were my all time favourite , especially the one where they go camping.
http://www.berenstainbears.com/ i used to borow this when i was younger from the library evrey week, sometimes i would hide it under my bed so that it wouldnt go back to the library, i ended up with about $16 in overdue fees - heh, and each time i returned it and went looking for another book i would just pick that one up again. my poor daddy if he had just brough the book it would have saved 100 trips to the library and prob only cost about $5. |
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(Needless to say, Mrs. Dallas insists that this continuing theme of paternal incompetence is what makes the books so attractive.) |
My favorite books were the Madeline L'engle books, A wrinkle in time, a wind in the door, a swiftly tilting planet and many waters.
I still catch a new meaning every time I read them. |
Charlie and the Chocolate Factory by Roald Dahl (My dad read this to me as I was recuperating from a broken arm and dislocated shoulder. Still gives me warm and happy memories of the parental closeness)
The Chronicles of Narnia (all of 'em) C.S. Lewis The Dark is Rising Sequence - Suzanne Cooper (I didn't read this one until I was in college, but love it.) Harriet the Spy - Louise Fitzhugh The Black Stallion (and sequels) - Walter Farley The Green Knowe Books - L.M. Boston (I like books that come in series) And I still love Black Beauty by Anna Sewell. Can't remember how many times I've read it. |
Andre Norton's Dark Piper..
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Dr. Suess' One Fish Two Fish Red Fish Blue Fish.
http://images.amazon.com/images/P/03...CMZZZZZZZ_.jpg |
Freddy Goes to Florida by Walter R. Brooks & the other Freddy series:)
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I was going to say "Harry Potter", but I have a hard time really considering these to be children's books (lest I then feel horribly immature for enjoying them too much), so I'm going to go with anything by Shel Silverstein.
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Re: whats is your favourite childrens book
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Anything by Mitsumasa Anno or Daniel Pinkwater.
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Are You My Mother and Encyclopedia Brown mysteries.
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The Charlie Brown Encyclopedia! It had everything explained in question and answer format. Each book covered a different topic, book one was the human body, book two I think was transportation.
Oh, and when I grew up a little I liked World Book encyclopedia. Even when I was too small to understand the words, I would look at the many many colorful pictures. |
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My favorite was always "The Black Stallion Returns" ... with the race in the desert.
I thought "The Black Stallion and the Girl" was kinda weak, but things get that way toward the end of series. I loved "Man O' War" too, even though it's not one of the BS set, it's still Farley, and about horses. I also loved the C.W. Anderson books ... "Afraid to Ride," "The Blind Connemara," etc. They seem to be out of print. Hmmmm. So is "Tall and Proud" by Vian Smith. My Kidlit is disappearing. I'll bet they're not findable in libraries, either, having been replaced by R.L. Stine and The Babysitter's Club. |
One of my very favorite books from when I was very small was one that had actually been my mother's when she was small - it's called 'Honey Bear', and it was published in the '20s. It's about a big, black bear who comes out of the woods and 'kidnaps' a baby, and is pursued by the parents, who find the bear's home in a big, hollow tree and discover that the bear just wanted someone to play and eat honey with. The illustrations are wonderfully done - very dark, dramatic, and realistic. I'm afraid that a lot of parents today would consider both the story and the pictures to be far too scary for kids.
As my own kids have grown up, I've become fond of Silverstein's 'The Giving Tree' and a book called 'Mouse and Tim'. |
The illustrations are wonderfully done - very dark, dramatic, and realistic. I'm afraid that a lot of parents today would consider both the story and the pictures to be far too scary for kids.
Another one that might not be considered appropriate by the more sensitive crowd: Neil Gaiman has actually written a couple of great children's books. "The Wolves in the Walls" and "The Day I Swapped My Dad for Two Goldfish" are both favorites in our house. Very cool illustrations, kind of Tim Burton/Alice in Wonderland-y. |
Also Coraline, for slightly older kids. And adults.
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I did the same thing. My aunt's family had a set of World Books, and when I'd get dumped off over there for a weekend with my cousins, and boredom set in, I was amused for endless hours reading them. It was like an analogue version of the Internet.
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Funny you should mention the Babysitter's Club, tho.. my daughter became obsessed with it recently (why I'm not sure), but she wanted to buy a couple of em and we could only find one at Border's. So we asked a clerk, and she said they didn't carry them... "it's all Mark Kate and Ashley and Lizzie McGuire now." :rolleyes: |
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Was it this one?
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Quzah. |
It's a picture book but it's not really aimed at kids:
When The Wind Blows by Raymond Briggs. It's utterly chilling, it's about nuclear war. This juxtoposition of this ordinary couple as all hell breaks loose. You have to read it to get what I mean. |
I saw the animated presentation many years ago.
Very, very sad indeed. |
I cannot believe that this thread's on the third page and nobody's mentioned The Phantom Tollbooth.
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How about the Hardy Boys, those are classics, I think I read them all during 2nd and 3rd grade. I remember loving Amelia Bedelia . Funny stuff |
The computer lab that I work at happens to sit next to the children’s book section of our library. This thread brought back a lot of memories and I started browsing. I found a few books that I had forgotten about
Five Children and It by E. Nesbit All of Gary Paulson’s Books Beatrix Potter's Books (The Tale of Peter Rabbit etc.) Shiloh Johnny Tremain was a classic I remember reading for school Chitty Chitty Bang Bang , definitely a classic I think my all time favorite children’s books has to be The BFG by Robert Dahl, then again I liked all of his books, that that stands out as one I read about 4 times. |
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Old Mother West Wind by Thorton W Burgess.
Mr Burgess, Peter Cottontail, Johnny Chuck, Bobby Racoon, Prickly Porky, Blacky the Crow, et al, were friends of mine. They lived 3 miles away. :) |
I loved every book I ever read when I was a kid, but when I was real small, my favorite was Mother, Mother, I Feel Sick! Send for the Doctor Quick, Quick, Quick!
It was supposed to be done as a shadow play (backlit actors behind a sheet, so all you could see was their silhouettes - sp?) It was about a little boy who has a bellyache, and the doctor removes things like lamps, birds, bicycles, etc. from his stomach. I was completely amazed, since at age 4, I assumed the kid had actually eaten these things. My mom read it to me 1,484,403,489 nights in a row. After that, I got into Curious George, and most of the Babar books. There was another one I'm wracking my brain to remember the title of....It had a steam engine named Mike. Mike couldn't dig as fast as the new diesel versions, so he was going to be replaced. Then he rescued someone (like the site foreman), and everyone thought he was da shit. Then Star Wars came out, and I never read anything but Star Wars related crap for the rest of my preteen life. Then it was porn. |
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Last of the Mohicans. really any of that series of books.
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I was a huge Enid Blyton fan as a kid ( Famous five, Folk of the Faraway tree etc) but I think the series that totally got me more than any other was the Narnia series.....I used to lie there at night wishing I could crawl through the wardrobe into a snowy woodland and meet Mr Tumnus the faun and Aslan the lion
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Time enough for love, what an awesome book.
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then again, i really like The Chronicles of Narnia, too. I really like to read a series of books about the same characters.
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