33 answers

Favorite Childhood Books

My four and a half year old loves to be read to and I think she is old enough for me to start reading her a chapter or two out of a chapter book every night. I used to love books like Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, Pippi Longstocking etc. Just wondering what your favorite books were as a child--something that would be age appropriate for a young child but longer than a picture book.
Thanks~!
**She is a total girlie girl but also loves things like spiders, worms, bugs etc. so as long as it is not a book about Dump Trucks or Tools and has great characters, she would probably love it. I was an avid reader as a child so I am familiar with most children's books. I am trying to see if there are any out there that may have passed me by as a child that I could discover with her.
She reminds me a lot of Ramona the Pest

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So What Happened?™

Oh the memories that are coming back to me! Thank you for reminding me of so many classics and for introducing me to some I had never heard of--like the Tree House books. I can't wait to head to the library! But keep 'em coming. I can never have too many suggestions!

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I loved the Boxcar Children when I was really young. They're for pretty young kids and a great start into mystery!

ALLLLL of the Beverly Cleary books -Henry and Ramona and Beezus -they're all great.

She's probably a little too young for Anne of Green Gables, but look over them and read them to her at some point!

There are lots of "Beginning Reader" small chapter books at the book stores if you go look in the kids section. Not too long or with chapters that are too long, but appropriate for this age group.

2 moms found this helpful

We've been reading _Pippi Longstocking_, _Winnie the Pooh_, and _The Wizard of Oz_ to my 3-year-old. (She reminds me of Pippi, which is why I chose that one.) _Peter Pan_ was one that my Dad read to me early, and I'm looking for a copy now.

I've been finding that fantasy stories often work better than stories set in the real world, because a very young kid doesn't necessarily have the knowledge and experience assumed in a story set in the real world, while a fantasy story will explain all the little details. On the other hand, be very careful to explain the difference between fantasy and reality. (My daughter would have happily jumped off the roof because Pippi had no trouble jumping down that far.)

I'm also finding that it helps sometimes to read a chapter twice before going on, or summarize where the story is before reading on. And for "Wizard of Oz", my daughter wanted to open up the book and start over immediately after finishing. She's absorbing more of it this time.

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My son is 5 and I have been reading chapter books to him for about a year and a half now. He loves Harry Potter, the Redwall series, and the Hobbit.

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More Answers

Winnie-the-pooh
Wind in the Willows
The Enormous Crocodile (Roald Dahl)
Fantastic Mr. Fox (Roald Dahl)
Any of Shel Silverstein's books of poetry (A light in the attic, where the sidewalk Ends)
Magic Treehouse series

In addition, with careful hunting you can find good versions of classics such as Peter Pan, Alice and Wonderland, and anthologies of fairy tales that keep the original text and language, but add significant amounts of illustrations and shorten the amount of text per page to maintain their interest.

Another thing we do is purchase unabridged audiocassettes and/or get them from the library of the same stories. We will put them on in the car, in the house when the kids are just playing, and after I've read to them and they're just falling asleep. This helps give a bit more familiarity with the vocabulary and plot line of the story, which makes them more engaged and interested in reading.

I have a lot more recommendations, but it is hard to get too specific without knowing her interests and maturity level. For example, the above are all books that my three year old daughter will listen to with great, maintained interest (she will be four in the fall), but it has only been in the past few months that I could really get my just-turned six year old son to focus as much as his younger sister on the very same material. If you want to share what kind of story lines your daughter enjoys and what kind of focus-level you think she has, I'd be happy to add more!

2 moms found this helpful

I loved the Boxcar Children when I was really young. They're for pretty young kids and a great start into mystery!

ALLLLL of the Beverly Cleary books -Henry and Ramona and Beezus -they're all great.

She's probably a little too young for Anne of Green Gables, but look over them and read them to her at some point!

There are lots of "Beginning Reader" small chapter books at the book stores if you go look in the kids section. Not too long or with chapters that are too long, but appropriate for this age group.

2 moms found this helpful

My almost 4yo loves Little House on the prairie books! And the full Winnie the Pooh book.

1 mom found this helpful

The Magic Treehouse series has been a hit with my kids.

1 mom found this helpful

I always like reading the Box Car Children series. It's about adventures these 4 children have after their parents die and they meet their rich Grandfather. They are about 3-4 grade level books. I still love to read them. J.

1 mom found this helpful

Although there is some controversy around them (for the occasional use of words like "stupid" and also for some "childish" language, which is criticized as poor grammar), we love the Junie B series. (We all laugh out loud--even my husband.) I think of Junie B. as this generation's Ramona Q.

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I really liked the Velveteen Rabbit. I'm not sure if it's a chapter book, but it is a longer book. Besides that, the Laura Ingalls Wilder books are great.

1 mom found this helpful

My children - including my 4 year old daughter - love books & audiobooks from the "Hank the Cowdog" series. They also like "The Littles" , Arthur books, or Berenstein Bears.

1 mom found this helpful

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