what is your favourite children/childhood story and why?
I would say mine are all of Beatrice Potter's series. I can still visualise the drawings from when one I was little :)
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what is your favourite children/childhood story and why?
I would say mine are all of Beatrice Potter's series. I can still visualise the drawings from when one I was little :)
Treasure Island
The best boys' book ever written. Action, adventure, pirates, betrayal, courage and the most heroic boy in literature.
I still love it!
The Moomins!
The Moomins of course:)
The Hobbit. I read it a dozen times.
Around the world in eighty days - Jules Verne.
The Children of the New Forest - Captain Marryat
Le Petit Prince. One can read it and experience new meanings throughout a lifetime.
1.Emil and the Detectives
2.Treasure Island
3.Little Women
4Jane Eyre
Much too old for The Moomins and I hated The Hobbit when I read it at 20
I remember reading Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, James and the Giant Peach, and A Wrinkle in Time over and over.
Going back even further, the Sesame Street book The Monster at the End of This Book, in which Grover desperately tries and fails to stop the reader from advancing toward the end, was a huge favorite, and is still good for laughs as an adult.
The Three Fat Men by Yury Olesha.
My father's childhood book, "I Don't Want to go go Bed" by Ruth Kauffman (Altemus "Wee Books for Wee Folks")...it's close to an antique now and has sentimental value.
From that early in life I don't remember which one. I read many, all in Spanish. What I remember vividly is The Adventures of Tom Sawyer which is a more mature book and influenced me the most; all versions.
My favourite books as a child were my scholastic children's illustrated dictionary and my encyclopedias. I was a boring, neurotic child.
Excuse me, big news. Obese monger Rush Limbaugh falls.
One Fish, Two Fish, Red Fish, Blue Fish.
My favourite children's book or story is two one is Cinderella and Little ... It is one of the most relaxing and hypnotic bed time books ever written.
La hormiguita viajera, Platero y yo, etc., etc. Then I remember my paternal grandfather who invented a story for me. It was about a donkey who learned not to eat, and the problem was that a few days after he learned, he died. Then there were stories based on, for example, "...piden pan. No les dan. Piden queso, les dan un hueso y les cortan el pescuezo. But apart from this recollection and some others from my maternal grandfather, I was not influenced very much by them.
Ah... Hobbit-bashing... **wipes a tear from the eye**
For me, the two I most remeber from my childhood were The Wizard of Oz and The Lost World - both of which I loved, and continue to love. One of my mad uncles also gave me a copy of The Silence of the Lambs for my ninth birthday - I think he was actually rather put out by how much I enjoyed it.
I remember listening toThe Lost World on the radio aged about 10 and being completely mesmerised by it.But I don't think I ever read it
My favorites as a child were:
Where the Red Fern Grows
Bridge to Terabithia
Charlotte's Web
The Secret Garden. Mary didn't take crap, I liked her. I did not like Anne of Green Gables, although it would probably be considered another one of my primary childhood books because my mom really liked reading it to me.
Ah, I found a copy of Hannibal under my mom's bed when I was little (I was a snoopy kid). I had an uncle named Richard Harris who recently died, so I thought it was some mysterious book written by him that she put it under her bed to keep it from me (I was also a stupid kid). I caught on that it wasn't by him as soon as I realized we'd have more money if it was, and it was my favorite book for a while. My mom is a huge reader, but she's a bit creepy, so reading very graphic books was nothing new to me. She didn't like cleaning very much, so the floor and tables were always littered with books about Jonestown, serial killers, real cannibals, ect., and most of them had pictures. I wonder how that impacted my development.
Nah, Jun, your mom was just being a good parent, exposing you to the variety of literature the world has to offer. :D
I loved The Secret Garden, too, and I liked Mary, but mostly I loved it for the deep suspense which was new to me as a kid, the discovery of Colin, and the fact that she had a secret garden. I would adore to have a house with a secret room or tunnel.
The Good Master and Tom's Midnight Garden. You don't hear much about these anymore, but they are really good. The latter is yet another book about a kid who had his own real secret world away from adults and the prying eyes of the world, the lucky kid.
The Trouble with Jenny's Ear, about a girl who could read people's minds. The Incredible Journey, which was and is, awesome.
A Boy Ten Feet Tall. My brother gave this to me when I was about ten. It is about a boy who has an incredible journey of his own. I was slightly obsessed with journeys.
And Caddie Woodlawn, also excellent.
Golden Dog. The best. book. ever.
These are all still good books, if anyone wants to give one of them a look. I think it's time for me to reread the last two.
Maybe this should become one of the monthly reading polls.
Not a bad idea, Calidore.
I'm afraid that, in my case at least, it's worse than that. It's hobbit-ignoring.
When I was a kid - so, under ten, say - I really liked the Bobby Brewster series. Also The Cave Twins, which was my favourite of the Twins series, which I devoured.
Of the more well-known classics, I was a huge fan of the Narnia series.
The Jungle Book definitely. My father used to read it to me all the time when I was a kid. The copy we had also had amazing illustrations.
In no particular order except for (1).
1) The Giraffe and the Pelly and Me
2) A Cricket in Time Square
3) Treasure Island
4) The Giver
5) Island of Blue Dolphin
6) The Wind in the Willows
7) Winnie the Pooh (original, not the picture books)
8) A Christmas Carol
9) George's Marvelous Medicine
10) The Scarlet Pimpernel
11) Wuthering Heights
12) Where the Red Fern Grows
13) Little Men
14) The Secret Garden
15) To Kill a Mockingbird
16) One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest
17) Alice in Wonderland
18) Charlie and the Chocolate Factory
19) Richard Scarry's Bedtime Stories
20) The BFG
21) Aesop's Fables
22) The Hans Christian Anderson's collection
22 books for this 22 y/o man! It's just a small taste of the wonderful children's classics I've had the infinite pleasure of reading. The amount of good children's literature is unlimited!
The Chronicles of Narnia by C.S. Lewis. Aaaah, I loved those books. I "inherited" them from my uncle when he passed on when I was 6. I took to reading them right away. I still have the same set in its own little box packed away in the basement because they started falling apart :'(
My favorite children's author remains Roald Dahl with books like The BFG, Matilda, Danny, the Champion of the World and Charlie and the Chocolate Factory.
My second favorite is the Swedish Astrid Lindgren with Pippi Longstocking, Emil of Lönneberga, Ronia the Robber's Daughter and The Brothers Lionheart.