Which books did you read when you were 10
Last night, I read the kiddies a goodnight story but, for some reason or other didn´t feel like reading them a fairy tale. I´d started reading them Oliver Twist but my second youngest didn´t understand very much of it and I decided to wait. I know it´s daft but I found Dostoyevsky " The Christmas Tree and The Wedding ". The children ( 10, 8˝ and 6 ) really got into it and enjoyed it.
It got me thinking. I was 10 when I read Julius Caesar but somehow my eldest seems too young for it. Not in his mind but in his reading skills ( probably because the poor mite has 3 languages to contend with in his everyday life ). I suppose a part of my predicament is that these kiddies of mine can sit through 3 hour operas, so they´re used to high drama but much of the great literature is rather complicated emotionally for small children and often deals with the darker and more grotesque side of life and human nature. I don´t believe in shielding children completely from those things but I don´t want to completely depress them all either.
What were you reading when you were 10 and what would you recommend as good reading for a goodnight story ? Not Harry Potter. I want them to read those books themselves and not C.S Lewis. My Daughter´s already reading them.
When I was eight years old and in the third grade ....
we moved to a new section where there were few children. Being lonely and loving to read, I read quite a few books at this time. Anyway, here's what I read beween eight and nine:
Oliver Twist - Charles Dickens
A Christmas Carol - Charles Dickens
Sherlock Holmes - Conan Doyle
The Back Arrow - Robert Louis Stevenson
Robin Hood - Paul Creswick
Treasure Island - Robert Louis Stevenson
Kidnapped - Robert Louis Stevenson
Robinson Crusoe - Daniel Defoe
Tom Sawyer - Mark Twain
Huckleberry Finn - Mark Twain
The Prince and the Pauper - Mark Twain
A Connecticut Yankee - Mark Twain
Tarzan novels (I bought them all with my allowance
I think there were 23 novels in all) - Edgar Rice Burroughs
The Three Musketeers - Alexandre Dumas
I kept a notebook for years of all the books I read so I remember many of those I read in early childhood. I tried other books, such as the Hardy Boys series, but those like the Hardy Boys I found too juvenile after reading the classics listed above. The ones I remember the most from these (which were more young adult) are the Black Stallion series by Walter Farley and the sea storeis by Howard Pease.