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Was going through our personal library from when our kids were growing up trying to decide what to keep for the grandson we are raising. We have Beverly Cleary, Judy Blume, Choose Your own Adventures, Little House on the Prairie. The Great Brain, Ronald Dahl, Ann Martin, and lots of others including factual paperback books. I read to him also.

2007-04-13 19:00:54 · 25 answers · asked by kriend 7 in Entertainment & Music Polls & Surveys

25 answers

Dr. Seuss~Cat in the Hat

2007-04-13 19:15:31 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

here are some tremendous sequence! Harry Potter - JK Rowling optimal experience - James Patterson Inheritance sequence - Christopher Paolini a series of unlucky activities - Lemony Snicket Inkheart Trilogy - Cornelia Funke the following There Be Dragons - James A Owen Artemis chicken sequence - Eoin Colfer His darkish resources - Phillip Pullman different tremendous reads The e book Thief - Markus Zusak The Thief Lord - Cornelia Funke Dragon Rider - Cornelia Funke The desire record - Eonin Colfer bypass Ask Alice - nameless Corps of The bare Boned airplane - Polly Horvath Little Brother - Cory Doctrow Marley and Me - John Grogan The Outsiders - SE Hinton the position The pink Fern Grows - Wilson Rawls evening - Elie Wiesel Order some classics! some youngsters love them (I continuously did!) Books by Charles Dickens Books by Jane Austen The Diary of Anne Frank The Lord of The earrings - JRR Tolkein Chronicles of Narnia - CS Lewis those are in basic terms some ideas i will placed extra as i imagine of them!

2016-10-18 01:18:20 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Goodnight Moon
I Love You This Much
Where the WIld Things Are
Where the Sidewalk Ends

2007-04-13 19:04:15 · answer #3 · answered by davidinark 5 · 0 0

The Happy Prince
Kidnapped
Treasure Island

2007-04-13 19:04:25 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Goodnight Moon

Millions of Cats by Wanda Gag

The Red, Blue, Yellow . . . fill in your favorite color .... Fairy Books by Andrew Lang

Catwings by Ursula LeGuin

Hans Brinker or The Silver Skates

The Princess and the Goblins by George McDonald

Just So Stories by Rudyard Kipling

The Wizard of Oz and subsequent books.

Any book with Anasi stories (African trickster spider, way fun)

too many more to mention.

2007-04-13 19:08:49 · answer #5 · answered by Tera 1 · 0 0

The Lottery: Shirley Jackson

2007-04-13 19:04:10 · answer #6 · answered by Raymond O 1 · 0 0

Roald Dahl for sure - he's the writer who got me reading on my own!

I think books like the Muddle Headed Wombat are fun because they have morals in them but they're really fun stories.

Horrible History books are good for older primary and younger high school kids. It shows history in it's true form and tells them gross facts that don't always come up like how kings and queens died strangely in Britain for example.

In all honesty, if you found something interesting, he might if you show your enthusiasm. One of my teachers really liked Enid Blyton and I never really did but I found a second hand book and I thought I'd try it and I liked this other book.

2007-04-13 19:11:25 · answer #7 · answered by purplebuggy 5 · 0 0

I was gonna say no childs library is complete without "Go dog go" but it seems that is a little juvenile, compared to what you have listed. My youngest loved the Goosebumps series, and he is 18 now, he has read the Harry Potter books,and the Hobbit series.

2007-04-13 19:07:57 · answer #8 · answered by barbara b 5 · 0 0

There is this beautiful book that i have the title is How Would It Feel ? A lady Mary Beth Goddard wrote it for her daughter who is was born ill. And the Illustrated by a wonderful artist i personally know. Anna Mycek-Wodecki. It is worth having for any child they will enjoy it.

2007-04-13 19:09:46 · answer #9 · answered by CHAEI 6 · 0 0

Peter Rabbit

2007-04-13 19:04:02 · answer #10 · answered by Rayne 5 · 1 0

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