Which Kid's Books Kick Ass?

Oops, my apologies, I hadn’t re-read the op since I first posted to the thread over two weeks ago. I remembered it as a request for books for the very young and school age, but sure enough it says “young adult” and **A Tree Grows in Brooklyn" certainly fits young adult.

I LOVE THAT BOOK!!!
I read it to my class when I worked with kidergarteners. It was the first book i remember being really excited about, because the main character actually talks to you while you’re reading.

For Seattlites (such as myself (during the school year)) The Weedle on the Needle is a good book.

Has anyone mentioned Winnie the Pooh? What a classic.

My dad read me Tom Sawyer and later Huckleberry Finn when I was a kid. Did anyone else feel like Tom Sawyer was a wuss after reading Huckleberry Finn? I mean, I thought Tom was cool but then when I heard Huck’s story I realized that he was just a wannabe. I liked the fence painting scene though.

My love affair with non-fiction began at a young age. I loved a book called Can’t You Make Them Behave, King George? which was about the American Revolution, only told from George III’s point of view, with information on him his family, etc. The book is appropriate for 3-4th graders who are interested, IMO, but I was a early reader, so YMMV.

“There’s a Wheedle on the Needle
and I know just what you’re thinking
but if you look up at night
you can see his red nose blinking.”

(I have totally forgotten the plot of the book, but will remember that forever.) Actually, the whole series of books by Stephen Cosgrove is pretty good.

Ping the Duck, about a duckling who lives on the Yangtze river on a houseboat. He gets lost and a mean boy catches him. Eventually he finds his houseboat.

For little kids really.

Where the heck was this thread hiding all this time?

My all-time favorites:
Anything by Shel Silverstein, Beverly Cleary or Dr. Seuss
The Giver, by Lois Lowery (an AMAZING book for young adults)
The “Junie B. Jones” books by Barbara Parks
Are You There God, It’s Me, Margaret and Then Again, Maybe I Won’t, by Judy Blume

Authors unremembered: William’s Ninth Life (cry? I thought I was going to DROWN in tears!), The Ghost Next Door and * Love, Anna*

Anyone ever read any of Fred (Herman Munster) Gwynne’s wonderful children’s books?

THANK YOU, Amarinth, for posting this. I checked out all the books in this thread that I hadn’t already read - last night I started Go to the Room of the Eyes. Wasn’t far into it before I started to think ‘hmm - read this before?’ Turns out this is a book I read when I was about 7 and really liked. I forgot the title and the author, so I couldn’t find it again; I’ve been trying to figure out what the book was ever since. Mystery solved, at long last!

Everybody Poops I mean, wow, think about it.

The Lion, The Witch and the Wardrobe was a favourite of mine which I haven’t seen mentioned…

I also agree with Charlotte’s Web, Hardy Boys, Nancy Drew, oh, most of them actually! :slight_smile:

There are a few I jotted down and will introduce to my 8 year old son. I’m sure he’ll like something called The Big Orange Splot!

Lloyd Alexander’s The Book of Three and the other books in that series (YA). I believe this has been mentioned before, but I think they deserve another mention.

I am resurrecting this thread for a couple of reasons.

  1. I want to thank **Finagle ** for recommending *Sinbad & Me * by Kin Platt. I liked it so much that I actually thought of committing an unspeakable crime of stealing it from the library. Which I would never do now that I have integrity…dammit.

  2. Which leads me to tell **Deepbluesea ** that I am now the proud owner of this book by all means legal.

  3. For the whopping price of **Three Dollars ** which also included shipping and handling.

There have been a couple other books recommended that based
on the mentioning here, my jotting it down to take a look at it, I have added a considerable chunk to my kids (ok, mine) personal library:

**Lord of the Nutcracker Men ** Ian Lawrence. A little boy in WW1 thinks he can control the outcome of the battles with the tin soldiers that his father made. His father is fighting for the brits.

**Dear Napolean, I know your are dead ** Elvira Woodruff. A young boys assignment to write to a famous person goes awry when he choses to write to dead famous people and gets replies.
What is going on at Gramps’ nursing home anyways? (Fun read.)

**Harry Potter Series ** I’m re-reading them right now. I can’t say enough about this series and am absolutely chomping at the bit for #5 and the next movie.

**Never Miss a sunset **J by Jean Gilge. Turn of the century Upper Midwest farm girl is stuck taking care of the house and mama and the other kids when mama is pregnant again. She resents missing school and hates the soon to be baby. I *loved * this story when I was a kid and it wasn’t until I went to replace my copy of it and couldn’t find it anywhere that I discovered it was a christian themed book and part of a set.

I have a stack of others that I haven’t read through yet, but details as they warrant. :slight_smile:

I cannot believe that this thread has grown to three pages long without a single mention of the great Bloom County Christmas story A Wish For Wings That Work.

A couple of my family’s favorites.

#1, and this is with a bullet. Weslandia by Paul Fleischman, Kevin Hawkes (Illustrator)
The following quote is a review of the book posted on the Barnes and Noble site but the link above goes to Amazon so you can see the pages.

You can see some of the pages at Amazon, it’s just brilliant.

We also like Phoebe’s Revolt and The Froggy Series as books which have characters who represent childhood archetypes the kids can usually relate to. We like pretty much any book really. We let the kids get five books a week on our trips to the library. They pick them at random from the shelves, it’s a great way to discover new books/authors. Harder to do with older children/adult books because those books get too long to bother reading if they suck wind. But with the kids books that average about twenty pages or so, even if you get a stinker it’s no real big deal. Not like you wasted an entire day reading about Rand al’Thor and his harem with nothing being resolved at any point.(not that I’m bitter)

Enjoy,
Steven

Every time this topic comes up, I mention the greatest picture book of all time:

The Wedding Procession of the Rag Doll and the Broom Handle and Who Was In It by Carl Sandburg

A few others that have not been mentioned yet (or if they were, I missed it):

The Twenty One Balloons by William Pene du Bois (along with many other of his books)

The Secret Garden by Francis Hodgson Burnett

Coraline by Neil Gaiman

Dragonsong by Anne McCaffrey
Also, my nomination for top Dr Suess book is the frequently overlooked
The 500 Hats of Bartholomew Cubbins

Wow, so many of those already mentioned that I love - I couldn’t possibly list all the favorites I’d add a second vote to.

Instead, I’ll just add one that, astonishingly, was skipped. The McGurk mysteries by E.W.Hildick. My favorites are the Snowbound Spy, the Slingshot Sniper and the Bashful Bank Robber.