Re: Those were good. I think I have all except for the Paddington so I will keep my eye out for it.
Camilla Send a noteboard - 11/02/2010 08:09:59 PM
Also, I should probably replace The Hungry Catipillar that is one of the ones that was probably read to pieces. Oh. I will have to watch for Dahl too. I think that more than a couple of people have mentioned him now and I have no idea of who they were talking about. Now I have a first name to help. Thank you.
I know that The Very Hungry Caterpillar comes in one of those cardboard editions which can stand quite a bit of chewing.
And Roald Dahl is amazing. On many levels. In addition to Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (which is perhaps the most famous) he wrote BFG (Big Friendly Giant), The Witches, Boy, Matilda, George's Marvellous Medicine, and any number of other good books. If you have not yet read him, I would recommend him, even to an adult. But I loved him unconditionally as a child.
Paddington is also wonderful. I am still slightly in love with him. Even if he is a bear. That sort of thing does not come between us.
*MySmiley*
structured procrastinator
structured procrastinator
What books would you consider essential to a children's library?
- 10/02/2010 08:25:07 PM
1977 Views
It's difficult because "children" are "children" from age 0 to roughly 12.
- 10/02/2010 09:10:16 PM
1463 Views
I loved "Cars, Trucks and Things"
- 11/02/2010 06:26:01 PM
1445 Views
A few random suggestions for younger kids...
- 10/02/2010 09:12:54 PM
1477 Views
Thank you for the suggestions and for adding your children's ages.
- 11/02/2010 06:29:33 PM
1437 Views
Now there's a good question.
- 10/02/2010 09:47:39 PM
1627 Views
- 10/02/2010 09:47:39 PM
1627 Views
I can see now that this is going to be one of those posts that I actually copy out the answers on
- 11/02/2010 06:44:19 PM
1426 Views
Since most of the names mentioned elsewhere are unfamiliar to me, that seems logical.
- 11/02/2010 09:33:12 PM
1557 Views
Like I would let my kids or grandkids touch that book?!
- 11/02/2010 10:29:13 PM
1542 Views
I pulled those books out a year or two ago to see if it was as beautiful as I remembered. It was.
- 12/02/2010 02:40:20 AM
1527 Views
Steven King!!!
- 10/02/2010 10:20:27 PM
1618 Views
When do you think I should introduce him to The Green Mile? I am not sure he will catch all
- 11/02/2010 06:50:28 PM
1471 Views
Madeleine L'Engle
- 10/02/2010 10:27:38 PM
1485 Views
I have not heard of it. I will be watching for it in the antique section. Hehe
- 11/02/2010 07:05:45 PM
1481 Views
- 11/02/2010 07:05:45 PM
1481 Views
A Wrinkle in Time is worth reading just for yourself. It's one of those books. *NM*
- 11/02/2010 10:17:10 PM
778 Views
Thirded, fourthed, or whatever number follows how many people have nominated this.
- 12/02/2010 10:57:58 PM
1390 Views
Peter Pan.
- 10/02/2010 10:34:42 PM
1498 Views
Sounds like children's books don't have national boundries.
- 11/02/2010 07:25:04 PM
1556 Views
Sounds like some of them do.
- 11/02/2010 08:11:36 PM
1599 Views
Yeah, I really wouldn't classify Asterix as children's books particularly...
- 11/02/2010 09:24:15 PM
1572 Views
Multi-level is the best way to describe them.
- 11/02/2010 09:38:38 PM
1562 Views
Asterix? OH! I do have one of those!! Now I recognize it by your description!
- 11/02/2010 10:32:18 PM
1433 Views
For "older" children definitely Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. *NM*
- 11/02/2010 01:11:09 AM
819 Views
Oz books! Oz books!
- 11/02/2010 05:04:42 AM
1551 Views
Mmmm. That reminds me. We have one of the first of those books upstairs in my mom's library.
- 11/02/2010 07:32:34 PM
1493 Views
Just buy lots and lots and you should be OK
- 11/02/2010 05:24:23 AM
1411 Views
- 11/02/2010 05:24:23 AM
1411 Views
I hope I kept my condensed classics. But the problems with those were that they were too memorable
- 11/02/2010 07:48:45 PM
1359 Views
Ohh, grandson.
- 11/02/2010 01:20:44 PM
1483 Views
Shel Silverstein!
- 11/02/2010 01:30:46 PM
1391 Views
Shel Silverstein is great (even if iirc I only ever read her in translation). *NM*
- 11/02/2010 01:33:14 PM
806 Views
He's a boy. You should listen to him read some of the poems.
- 11/02/2010 01:50:16 PM
1589 Views
I am going to have to check Siverstein out. Children's books <b>and</b> A Boy Named Sue?
- 11/02/2010 07:46:02 PM
1397 Views
~peruses shelves~
- 11/02/2010 02:19:11 PM
1437 Views
nuh uh.
- 11/02/2010 02:22:35 PM
1531 Views
Shoulda known, really
- 11/02/2010 02:24:25 PM
1455 Views
- 11/02/2010 02:24:25 PM
1455 Views
I read some of my dad's L'Amour books when we went on a cross country bus trip when I was eleven
- 11/02/2010 07:40:30 PM
1341 Views
Re: What books would you consider essential to a children's library?
- 11/02/2010 03:28:01 PM
1466 Views
Those were good. I think I have all except for the Paddington so I will keep my eye out for it.
- 11/02/2010 07:43:27 PM
1438 Views
Re: Those were good. I think I have all except for the Paddington so I will keep my eye out for it.
- 11/02/2010 08:09:59 PM
1384 Views
So I am familiar with some of his work if not his name. BFG definitly qualifies as an essential.
- 11/02/2010 08:30:50 PM
1475 Views
A few for different ages
- 11/02/2010 04:23:22 PM
1577 Views
I don't remember the first three. I will watch for those. Or the last ones either. Feel free to add
- 11/02/2010 07:55:09 PM
1534 Views
Oh god, I could go on and on. You see...my mom teaches 1st grade...
- 11/02/2010 08:04:04 PM
1470 Views
Another vote for Babar!
- 11/02/2010 09:36:19 PM
1358 Views
Babar is very universal. Hasn't everyone read Babar? I can still see the pictures. *NM*
- 11/02/2010 10:33:58 PM
712 Views
An answer of a different sort
- 11/02/2010 09:52:51 PM
1488 Views
- 11/02/2010 09:52:51 PM
1488 Views
Give a child the gift of reading and you give them a gift for life
- 12/02/2010 11:21:25 AM
1410 Views
Well, my favourite "Young Adult" books have always been the Redwall series *NM*
- 18/02/2010 06:07:18 AM
846 Views
Re: What books would you consider essential to a children's library?
- 26/08/2010 10:00:03 AM
1304 Views

*NM*