Anything written by Louis Sachar is bound to be a winner. (Heh, get it? Bound? Books?)
[sup]Don’t be afraid to hit that drum. A little enthusiasm never hurt anybody.[/sup]
Half-Magic by Edward Eager(?). I remember reading this as a child and thinking “Wow, books are so cool.”
My daughter absolutely loved the Junie B Jones and The Stupid Smelly Bus. This is part of a series and they were the only books I could get her to read. That was until she discovered Beverly Cleary.
Now my son was reading well beyond his grade level when, in the sixth or seventh grade he discovered Captain Underpants. These had to be the most juvenile juvie books ever. The whole family can still remember our new names. Tra la la!
Daniel Pinkwater is God. I read The Big Orange Splot when I was seven and it changed my life. I’ve read lots of Pinkwater since then. I didn’t read Yobgorgle until I was 27, but I still enjoyed it. That was the one that had the guy whose car was perfectly aligned with Vedic principles, right?
Anything by Daniel Pinkwater. Seriously, no matter how old you are, whether they’re his children’s books or his adult books. This man is incredible.
I’ve read Alice in Wonderland quite a few times, and I really enjoyed it. I read my mother’s copy of the annotated version, and I enjoyed that one even more.
Maniac Magee by Jerry Spinelli is a good one.
Of course, Shel Silverstein is wonderful.
John Bellairs wrote a series of terrific mystery/horror books for kids. I check them out of the library all of the time. They still give me nightmares! Edward Gorey’s illustrations…:shudder:!
So many great ones have already been named. I forget how many times I read Charlotte’s Web as a kid.
The Neverending Story by Michael Ende (natch)
I second the poster who mentioned Roald Dahl. I read his books constantly when I was little. While Charlie and the Chocolate Factory was good, my personal favorites were Fantastic Mr. Fox and Danny, the Champion of the World.
I also remember enjoying The Great Brain series by John D. Fitzgerald.
I’m almost ashamed to admit that Where the Red Fern Grows by Wilson Rawls was the first and only book that ever made me produce tears.
Beverley Cleary wrote a lot of great children’s books. I especially remember The Mouse and the Motorcycle and Runaway Ralph.
i can’t believe nobody mentioned hardy boys or tom swift… I had some really old copies of my dad’s when i was real young and grew up reading (or having read to me) them…
There were some great short stories… I seem to remember one about a bunch of chinese brothers that could do strange things (such as swallowing entire oceans). Personally I’m an advocate of whatever books get kids thinking way out of the box, so all things odd are great.
[ul]
[li]Anything by Asmiov. I’m serious. Asmiov is a very easy-to-comprehend author, has a wide variety of work available (he wrote science fiction, fantasy, poetry (some of it even clean :D), nonfiction, and who knows what else), and is intelligent enough to hold the interest of the bright kids. He also avoids the Major Sin in Dealing With People: He isn’t patronizing. I always hated being talked down to. Still do, in fact.[/li][li]Lizard Music (This one is a ‘favorite from left field’, so to speak. Pinkwater has created a very funny, very good, very odd world in this novel. It’s worth a read even if you have children (or grandchildren) of your own.)[/li][li]Fudge, Superfudge, etc. (I forget the rest of the series.) (About a rather insane little kid, told from his older brother’s perspective. Reminded me of home. :))[/li][li]Bumper Tubbs (Definitely a great book for early elementary school kids. Simple without being patronizing, funny without being too absurd, and it has some very good illustrations.)[/li][li]The Pigman (Zindel is great for the middle school crowd.)[/li][/ul]
Many of the books I was going to list already have been listed. Kudos to the well-read Dopers!
The very same; the terms of sale mandated that a chicken suit be worn while driving it. It also featured a character who hunted cars, and the Flying Dutchman’s tragic quest for a good corned beef hash sandwich.
I loved most of the books that have already been mentioned as a child. But the best new children’s book is The Stinky Cheese Man and Other Fairly Stupid Tales by Jon Scieszka. It is a hilarious collection of warped fairy tales. I bought a copy before I came to college so I could enjoy it whenever I want.
Let’s see… What hasn’t been mentioned yet? The Chronicles of Narnia, by C. S. Lewis, the Chronicles of Prydain (starts with The Book of Three), by Lloyd Alexander, The Hobbit (how did that get left off of everyone’s lists?), and the Harry Potter books. Can you tell I’m a big fantasy fan?
In other genres: The Rats of NIMH, The Danny Dunn books (can’t remember the author, alas), the Little House books by Laura Ingalls Wilder, the Magic Schoolbus books (who wrote those?), Pickles, the Fire Cat, The Hungry, Hungry Catapillar, the Sweet Pickles books, the Serendipity books, and various Sesame Street books, most notably Big Bird’s Busy Book and The Monster at the End of This Book.
Beverly Cleary and Willow Davis Roberts were my favorite authors as a kid. The Bunnicula series, the Fudge series, and Encyclopedia Brown were also great. Uncle Robert’s Secret and some other books by Wylly Folk St. John. Killing Mr Griffin by Louis Duncan.
Anyone else remember Willow Davis Robets? I read almost all of her books when I was 10-12 years old. Some of the titles I remember: The Girl with Silver Eyes, Megan’s Island, The Minden Curse, More Minden Curses, What Could Go Wrong?, and Babysitting is a Dangerous Job.
The only kid’s books I have read as a non-kid are the Harry Potter books. I liked them a lot and I am looking forward to the next one and hoping the movies don’t suck.