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2007-02-21 10:08:58 · 11 answers · asked by hannahsue8 1 in Arts & Humanities Books & Authors

11 answers

Tales of the Fourth Grade Nothin
Paul Jenning books
Morris Gleitzman books
The Magic Faraway Tree - Enid Blyton (and all the other ones like The Adventures of the Wishing Chair etc)
Harry Potter
Narnia books
The Hobbit - J.R.R Tolkein
The Babysitters club seems to appeal to this age group and the saddle club if she likes horses
Thunderwith - Libby Hawthorn (? i think)
Came back to show you I could fly - Robin Klein (though this deals with drugs so maybe leave it a year or too. I just remember reading it in year 5 I think so about 11)
Little Women - Louise May Alcott
Pollyanna
Heidi
What Katy Did
The Wind in the Willows
Alice in Wonderland

2007-02-21 10:55:14 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The Ear, the Arm, and the Eye, The Westing Game, Dealing With Dragons, Harris and Me, The Phantom Tollbooth, Maniac Magee, Watership Down, True Confessions of Charlotte Doyle

2007-02-22 11:04:44 · answer #2 · answered by Chotu B 2 · 0 0

Two of my favorite authors are Sharon Creech and Andrew Clements. They write a lot of good realistic fiction. Some of my favorites are Walk Two Moons, The Wanderer, Love That Dog, and Ruby Holler by Creech and The School Story, Frindle, and The Janitor's Boy by Clements.

Some great fantasy authors that haven't been mentioned yet are Jane Yolen (Tartan Magic trilogy and many others) and Susan Cooper (The Dark is Rising series).

The Alice series by Phyllis Reynolds Naylor is excellent. The stories are about a girl who lives with her father and teenaged brother (her mother died when she was young). The stories deal with a lot of different issues that girls face, including boyfriends and puberty.

I hope the ten year old finds some good reads!

2007-02-21 13:44:53 · answer #3 · answered by draccatcat 2 · 0 0

The Westing game
Holes
Bud not Buddy
Bridge to Teribithia (sp?)
Saffron's Angel
Watchers
Island of Blue Dolphins
Little house in the big woods
The Alex Rider series (I think it's a higher level though)
Freaky Friday
Oliver Twist

2007-02-21 10:19:47 · answer #4 · answered by Meg 2 · 0 0

I'd recommend the following:
1. The Little Prince by Antoine de Saint- Exupery
2. Little Women by Louisa M. Alcott
3. To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee
4. The Red Pony by John Steinbeck
5. Short Stories (any collection) by Roald Dahl
6. Cider with Rosie by Laurie Lee (an English lecturer told me to read it some 40 years ago, he's an Oxford graduate.)
I hope you'd find them all enjoyable.

2007-02-21 12:42:48 · answer #5 · answered by Arigato ne 5 · 0 0

My favourites at that age were:
A Little Princess
Harriet the Spy
Charlotte's Web
All the Narnia books
All the Little House books
All the Dr. Suess books
and, of course
All the Harry Potter books (they weren't around when I was 10, though!) - Actually, I think these should really be read at a slightly older age. I'd say around 13.

2007-02-21 10:32:34 · answer #6 · answered by shamrock 5 · 0 0

Mein Kampf
Grapes of Wrath
Crime & Punishment
Cat in the Hat
Hamlet
Frankenstein
Satanic Bible
The Excorcist
A Child Called It
The Giver

2007-02-21 15:47:48 · answer #7 · answered by roxusan 4 · 0 1

Definitely Walk Two Moons. It's such a good book.

2007-02-21 21:21:36 · answer #8 · answered by T 4 · 0 0

" Anne of Green Gables " by L.M. Montgomery
And the sequels. You'll really like them. Heartwarming and funny but sad as well.

2007-02-21 15:37:17 · answer #9 · answered by concernedjean 5 · 0 0

i does no longer call her genius yet i could call her progressed. It somewhat jogs my memory of myself. To a extensive degree. everybody made exciting of me whilst i replaced into youthful by using fact once I have been given bored, i could discover textbooks or workbooks from college and do homework that we weren't assigned. I liked making up my very own "lesson" plans and attempting to tutor myself new issues. It sounds like she's been on a working laptop or workstation her complete life. the quickly typing is possibly by using fact she enjoys being on the workstation, so she picked it up ok. I enjoyed to place in writing memories commencing around age 8-10, so I picked up typing rapidly. returned - sounds like hers is from bearing directly to the comparable reasoning. i'm 24 now with a typing WPM of ninety 5-one 0 five. once I took my extreme college typing type, my instructor advised me I typed greater suitable than she did. they had somewhat permit young ones arise and are available and watch me kind by using fact everybody replaced into so surprised at how briskly i could pass. Her typing skills would be very advantageous whilst she reaches the working international. As for person examining, that's an indication that she has an above age point vocabulary. returned, an extremely solid project. I too have consistently enjoyed examining, and as an person, pass by a pair of e book or greater a week. So that is spectacular that she's figuring out on that up early. it will stay along with her. particular human beings have a undeniable kind of mind. i do no longer comprehend the thank you to label it, yet your daughter thinks like me. She has a discovering pushed recommendations and looks to love creativity, inspite of the indisputable fact that no longer quite the traditional spatial inventive way. She has a be conscious-suitable creativity. this is going to help her out SOOO properly. I somewhat have consistently picked up new guidance quickly. i'm no longer the main sensible person interior the international, yet i'm actual no longer stupid. however the kind of recommendations that I do have (and that it style of feels your daughter does) is amazingly solid for try taking and soaking up guidance in a school like placing. Sorry that I saved speaking plenty approximately myself in this... yet your tale basically somewhat jogged my memory of myself at her age. proceed to nurture her creativity via letting her examine books left and suitable. possibly get her a scrapbooking equipment or something like that for a birthday/christmas. you could discover she has a skill for that or something else inventive.

2017-01-03 03:55:17 · answer #10 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

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