|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Perhaps your favorite youngster has already
read all of the classics? Here
are
some more, perhaps not as obvious on the first go-around, but cherised
gems all the same. The categories are somewhat arbitrary, of
course,
each one of these books is on someone's classics list. But if you
haven't discovered them yet, it is high time you do!
The
Borrowers
by Mary Norton Tiny people have big problems in the world, but the Borrowers are clever and always come up with ingenious solutions to overcome their petite size. |
Rebecca
of Sunnybrook Farm
by Kate Douglas Smith Wiggin Ten-year old Rebecca is fiesty, opinionated, and of course, charming. Maine might have been a boring place before, but certainly not after, Rebecca. |
The
Dark is Rising
by Susan Cooper On his eleventh birthday, Will Stanton discovers that he is the last of the Old Ones, and must help find the Six Signs of the Light to overcome the evil forces, the Dark. |
Mary
Poppins
by P.L. Travers Was there ever a nanny as much fun as Mary Poppins? There is no such thing as routine with Ms. Poppins, unless you consider spontaneous fun and adventures routine. |
Joyful
Noise
by Paul Fleischman These are more than just poems, they are word songs scored for two voices. Discover the joy of reading with a friend, and hearing what words sound like. Newbery Winner 1989. |
It's
Like This, Cat
by Emily Neville When a boy needs a friend and the world is cold and aloof, thank goodness for felines willing to not only show their affection, but receive some as well. |
Strawberry
Girl
by Lois Lenski Most of Lenski's books about small town America are out-of-print but still strongly popular. Her illustrations as well as her matter-of-fact style still ring true. Pending availability. |
From
the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E Frankweiler
by E. L. Konigsburg Claudia and her little brother decide to run away and take up residence in the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Who could have expected what happens next? |
The
Witch of Blackbird Pond
by Elizabeth George Speare What exactly is a witch? Kit might like to know too, since it doesn't take long for the Puritan community she has been transplanted into to decide that headstrong and athletic Kit must be one. |
Are
you There God? It's Me, Margaret.
by Judy Blume I can remember reading this one and thinking: what audacity! yes, of course, I feel like that too! Blume's no-nonsense approach still reads like a breath of fresh air. |
Misty
of Chincoteague
by Marguerite Henry Phantom is the most wild and elusive of the wild ponies who live on an island off the shores of Maryland. Paul and Maureen are determined to earn enough money to buy her, but are surprised to discover she has a colt. |
Anne
of Green Gables
by L.M. Montgomery Red-headed Anne isn't the orphan boy her foster parents were expecting, but talkative, mischievious Anne wins them over all the same. |
Book Club types available:
Reader's Club: clean used
books
Bookworm Society: new books
Book Lover's Guild: collectible
hardbacks
giftwrap and shipping included
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|