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Chantelle Carlson's avatar

Gosh - there are so very many. I’ve homeschooled 4 kids....mostly for the very reason of being able to read them incredible “old” books. Caddie Woodlawn, Sign of the Beaver, Year of Miss Agnes, Trumpet of the Swan, My Side of the Mountain, Little Britches, Emily of New Moon, Anything by Elizabeth Goudge, Little Women....just to name a few. Literature for children and adults is so important in developing language and moral character.

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Nicole's avatar

Yes to My Side of the Mountain! I just passed it along to my oldest, who is about to turn 8. He loves it, reminds him of going to his grandparents in the Shenandoah Valley.

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Beatrice van Dijk's avatar

I know I like you these are all personal favourites AND favourites with my girls! Currently wondering about sending a copy of Caddie Woodlawn to an old friend in Winnipeg with two redheaded daughters. Going to!

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Renée's avatar

Love Caddie Woodlawn and Little Women!

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Beatrice van Dijk's avatar

I second!

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Dwell in the Land's avatar

The Little Britches series by Ralph Moody is an absolute favorite/must in our house. Also, the Melendy and Goneaway Lake series by Elizabeth Enright. Also the Living Forest Series by Sam Campbell -- don't give up after the first book, they get better after that. I second many of the books already listed here.

I so appreciate this discussion -- rescuing used books, especially children's books is a particular passion of mine 😊💛

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Elizabeth's avatar

So wonderful to see Goneaway Lake named! It is a dear favorite from my own childhood and I have read it and its sequel to my stepson. We haven’t begun the Melendy series yet but we have the first in our possession!

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Francesca's avatar

I was going to say the Ralph Moody (Little Britches) series as well! Such a treasure for our young men to read. And young women too.

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Beatrice van Dijk's avatar

Melendy series an absolute fave with my girls! 🙌

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Emily Phillips's avatar

So many!! My oldest child is almost 9, so we haven’t branches into older-teen books yet for them, but here’s what we have enjoyed thus far:

Little Britches series (similar to LHOTP but more boy-oriented)

Swallows and Amazons

The Children of Noisy Village

Lord of the Rings

Narnia

Men of Iron by Howard Pyle

Any and all of the GA Henty books - great for boys, plus tons of historical information

Rascal, Trumpet of the Swan, My Side of the Mountain

The Secret Garden

Treasure Island... etc

Dangerous Journey - by Laszlo H

Any of the classics - there a reason they are timeless.

For younger children, some treasured picture books:

The Olden Days

The Man Who Cooked For Himself

All the Elsa Beskow books

Frog & Toad

James Herriott

The Rainbabies

Bread & Jam for Frances

So many!

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Natalie's avatar

Elsa Beskow books are beautiful!

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Em's avatar

Another similar to Elsa Beskow is Sybil Von Olfers, esp The Root Children and The wind Children.

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Beatrice van Dijk's avatar

Love this list. My Side of the Mountain 👏

The Cay is another good one.

And Baby Island by the author of Caddie Woodlawn. I had a little survivalist 😂

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Daisy's avatar

Baby Island was my favorite book as a kid. I was so excited when I found a second hand copy of it My kids loved it too!

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Mallory Potts's avatar

We absolutely LOVED Bread & Jam for Francis as children. Frog & Toad as well.

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Beatrice van Dijk's avatar

All of a Kind Family, Pippi Longstocking and real dinkum Roald Dahl in all his disturbing glory. Huge favourites at our house. Also Half Magic and anything by Edward Eager.

How are any of us supposed to learn the humility that comes from understanding that our own perspective is limited by the time and culture in which we live, if the best authors of the past are sanitized so we cannot view their limitations through the perspective of cultural change? They were intelligent and also limited in how they perceived the world - just as we are. The perspectives of our time and culture certainly have their limitations and flaws - we are often just too embedded to be aware of them. Dickens was brilliant and sexist. E. Nesbit was brilliant and racist. These things can coexist. The great authors of now (and formulaic AI already seems to be producing half of Scholastic's inane library so NOT that) will have their contradictions and limitations too. Let us see and learn from the flaws and limitations of previous generations as well as from their brilliance. Sigh.

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Tara's avatar

Totally agree. Not a single book where something doesn't give me a little bite, just like the people around us. :)

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Rebecca's avatar

Yes, so great. I cannot understand the rewriting of potentially flawed (in some perspective) literature. It was the time. And this is our time. Also flawed and beautiful in many ways. Humans.

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Janene's avatar

Oh the Half Magic series is Magical!!

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Ruth Gaskovski's avatar

Our home has grown to include 17 bookshelves lined with classics (I collect them from book depots and used bookstores and library sales), fiction, non-fiction, most in English, some in French, some German. I am starting to collect multiples of my favourites ( David Copperfield, A Tale of Two Cities, Jane Eyre, Jungle Book, Tom Sawyer, anything by L.M. Montgomery etc.) so that the children will be able to take them along to their homes once they move out. As libraries continue to shed great classic picture books I am scooping those up as well.

We also built a "Little Library" on our front lawn (which looks essentially like a giant bird house) where we place books that people can take or borrow; they in turn can drop off books they no longer want.

A wonderful nature book that my 10-year old loves to look at is Edith Holden's a Country Diary of an Edwardian Lady; it has wonderful watercolour illustrations of flora and fauna.

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Dwell in the Land's avatar

Yes, A Country Diary is wonderful!

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Vicky's avatar

May I ask which books you have collected in German? We speak German to our children and I would love to be able to read some of those books to them in German.

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Kristin's avatar

I have all boys, and this is a book list (of mostly old, beautiful books) I reference often.

https://circeinstitute.org/blog/blog-books-cultivating-honorable-boys/

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Nikki's avatar

That is a good list, thanks. I like that they quoted Little Britches, never tire of read it.

“Son, there is no question but what the thing you have done today deserves severe punishment. You might have killed yourself or the horse, but much worse than that, you have injured your own character. A man’s character is like his house. If he tears boards off his house and burns them to keep himself warm and comfortable, his house soon becomes a ruin. If he tells lies to be able to do the things he shouldn’t do but wants to, his character will soon become a ruin. A man with a ruined character is a shame on the face of the earth.”

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Ruth Gaskovski's avatar

That is an excellent list. We used the Mensa Excellence in Reading Lists, as well as the CLRC and Memoria Press reading lists see here https://humanitasfamily.net/reading-lists/

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Sarah Laucks's avatar

The USA-based publisher Good and the Beautiful is right with you on this thinking. They've been diligently finding and republishing older books. We love so much of what they've republished. I just read Marjorie (originally Marjorie of Monhegan) and it really got me thinking. I read it aloud to my husband and son also. Then there's The Other Side of the Wall (originally published in 1826!). You might really enjoy two of their nature books. One is Nature Reader Birds, the other is Nature Reader Insects and Arachnids. Both contain 3-4 republished stories from the 50's or 60's. It was a jolt when I first opened one - my sister and I read these books as kids, the memories came flooding back. The wonderful thing about the publishing companies playing these games with rewriting the kids books is that it's sending droves of us looking for older books and into used book stores. We've been having the most wonderful time finding the most wonderful stories! P.S. We love everything on your list. Just need to read the Farley Mowat title!

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Rebecca McEvoy's avatar

I’m just about to purchase the Good and the Beautiful homeschool curriculum for my young boys. Your post makes me feel even more confident in this decision, Sarah!

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Sarah Laucks's avatar

I hope that you like it! It has been a great fit for us. What I've learned is that you don't have to do every single page in a curriculum. We use ours a lot, but I also use it as a guide and sometimes we acquire the knowledge elsewhere or in other ways. I think their curriculum is stellar. I love that they make the PDF version available for free. It lets you really examine the curriculum to decide if it feels right. If you could visit our home you'd see shelves lined with their stuff lol! We have the science units as well. Good luck with it and have fun!

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Barbara Clark's avatar

My mother grew up in the Prairies and loved the Little House on the Prairies. I have her set of books that are falling apart. As she was dying with AZ, I read her the books out loud. I am now re-reading James Herriot books.

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Valkyrie's avatar

This is an incredibly important thread - thank you Tara! Retired teacher here weighing in here. So many books teach about life, values, how to be a good human, in an indirect way, and the best books (thinking of Cat in the Hat, for example) spark conversation/discussion and exploration. A very recent example for me: I was an avid reader of Marguerite Henry's books growing up (horse crazy girl, horse crazy still). A friend just gave me an old edition of Black Gold, which I had never read. It's a fictional account of a real race horse, circa 1920. At one point she has the words to the Kentucky state(?) song (at the time?) and it includes the word "darky." That took me aback for a moment, but those are the teaching moments with children. If we whitewash (no pun intended) all sorts of history, how do we know about learning and growing a different way? The missed opportunities for discussion are mind blowing if you take it all out. Kudos to all here, and thank everyone for their recommendations and thoughts.

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Jennifer Tibbitt's avatar

Totally agree. The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn come to mind...

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CJr's avatar

I’m super picky about high quality writing for my kids to read regularly! The older books are SO much better in this regard. Particularly interested in nonfiction as I prefer them to read real stories for at least 75% of their reading. We have read TONS of Holocaust/communism/world war II stories. We are Christians so we also read and/or listen to tons of missionary/martyr books. We listened to Rascal after Tara wrote about it and LOVED it!!! But I also love classics like Old yeller, Where the Red Fern Grows, The Incredible Journey.....Highly recommend Old Squires Farm and the sequel Sailing on the Ice, and Ben Logan’s The Land Remembers. Anything Wendell Berry.

Thanks everyone for sharing their suggestions!

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CJr's avatar

Lois Lenski has some great books, Indian Captive, Strawberry Girl....

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Mallory Potts's avatar

Indian Captive is great!

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Lela M's avatar

Oh I love this thread! I am in my early 20s and don’t yet have kids but I am already thinking fondly of all the books my future children will read. I was a voracious reader as a kid, so I figured I’d put some of my favorites here. I loved Narnia, Little House series, Anne of Green Gables, My Side of the Mountain, anything by Dahl, The Hobbit, Stuart Little, The Secret Garden, Misty of Chincoteague, Little Women, Pippi Longstocking, and Charlotte’s Web. Also James Harriot did some writing for children that is wonderful. I can’t wait to write down all of your suggestions to read to my kids one day!

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Unsocialized's avatar

My children have really enjoyed the books by E Nesbitt. Also The Just So Stories… Anne of Green Gables, Beatrix Potter, and the Jacob Two Two books.

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Natalie's avatar

Yes to all of these!!!

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Katherine Triest's avatar

What a great idea! And although I have no children, since I am 73, I can add some real oldies:

Heidi (!) Johanna Spyri the healing effects of living with goats in the mountains

Moomintroll books by ?? I forget -- Finnish author

Tistou of the Green Thumb Maurice Druon

The Wonderful Adventures of Nils S. Lavansdotter (naughty boy ends up flying on a magic goose all over Sweden)

Freddy the Pig series (forgot author) The farm animals solve various mysteries

Nature: One Day on Beetle Rock by Sally Corrigan

And thank you for supporting paper/print books -- I work for a used book store!

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Melissa Royer's avatar

Would you believe, I was wishing to find a thread of suggestions of this sort just last week? In particular, books that foster a connection with nature as well as old values. I’ll be referring back to this thread many times I suspect! ❤️

One of my daughter & I’s absolute favorite book series we’ve read together I did not see mentioned: The Birchbark House series. It is historical fiction set in the 1850s, following a young Native American girl and her family, much like the Little House series. It is captivating, full of detail about how they lived their lives, much about day to day and survival, how they felt connected with nature, and such beautiful family connectedness. It also is a great parallel to read after the Little House series, to see it from the other side of the Native Americans at that time. I’m hoping Louise Eldridge continues the series (she has written 5 so far!).

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Nicole's avatar

I loved all the Richard Scarry books as a kid. Sadly my mom didn’t keep any of them but I have been able to find a lot at old book swaps or buying them brand new on Amazon. His artwork is just so whimsical and endearing.

My oldest is just turning 8 so I’m starting to share books with him that I loved to read on my own. So many mentioned above but I also gave him some Nancy Drew and Hardy Boys books my mom passed down to me.

And always Shel Silverstein 💚

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Deanna's avatar

So many great books I had forgotten about! We love The Penderwicks series. I read it outloud to our girls for the first time a few years ago and we all laughed and cried together. It reminds me of a great mix of little women and the boxcar children.

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Emma's avatar

Will add more later, but my little one (18 months) loves The Ox Cart Man by Donald Hall, Miss Rumphius by Barbara Cooney, anything John Galdone.

And don’t forget the poetry!

Anything Shirley Hughes

When We Were Very Young AA Milne

Classic Mother Goose Nursery Rhymes (Kate Greenaway’s is particularly lovely)

A Children’s Garden of Verses

A Child’s Calendar Year John Updike

Favorite’s from my childhood...

Andrew Henry’s Meadow

Jenny Linsky Series

We Were Tired of Living in a House

Nancy Drew Series

Mandy Series

My mom used to read from The Book of Virtues every night while we all piled in her big bed. She gave us each a copy of the book when we started our own families. Such beautiful memories. Highly highly recommend. Great for all ages.

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Yelena's avatar

We loved Shirley Hughes’ books too!

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Em's avatar

Yes, poetry!! National Geographic has two beautiful volumes of collected poetry with stunning photographs. Also Shel Silverstein.

Animals Animals by Eric Carle. And for younger kids we’ve loved (and memorized most of) Here’s a Little Poem by Jane Yolen

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Ruth Gaskovski's avatar

For younger kids the picture books Edison, Lindbergh, Armstrong, and Einstein (all the main characters are mice) by Torben Kuhlman are a visual feast. They have detailed, beautiful drawings and inspired many projects in our home.

Treasures in the Snow by Patricia St.John, Call of the Wild by Jack London, The Hobbit, Swiss Family Robinson are some others that come to mind.

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Mallory Potts's avatar

Call of the Wild and White Fang are favorites of mine even as an adult!

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Nicole Jones's avatar

Treasures in the Snow us so good!!

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Jen's avatar

My boys 8&6 loved Swiss family Robinson. The extreme details of all the projects they built had them mesmerized!

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Renée's avatar

Adding "rainbow garden" also Patricia St. John.

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Tonya's avatar

I started reading my 5 year old the little house series after that last chat. Makes me long for a simpler time. Did you know they are “updating” Roald Dahl books?

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Tara's avatar

Hi Tonya, yes that was the link I put in on the post. I suspect this is a trend that will continue unabated. Another reason to get these books while we can and preserve them as they were. "James and the Giant Peach" was one of my favourite books as a kid.

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Chelsie “thegrazinglife”'s avatar

I was going to mention this 😵‍💫 My MIL quickly bought the box set for us (even though we l ready have it) so that her grand children wouldn’t have to read “rewritten hogwash” 😂 She did the same when Dr Seuss was under fire.

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Christine De B's avatar

The Roald Dahl books were already massively tamed by his editors. He was probably not a children's writer that I would have enjoyed reading in the original form. The brother Grimm were also tamed down for young audiences, but RD was just weird, lol.

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Janene's avatar

Roald Dahl's memoirs for kids, especially, Flying Solo are complete gems. They talk about his time in Africa with poisonous snakes, his time as a fighter pilot... very popular with all my kids and me!

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Tonya's avatar

Yes, very weird. My husband doesnt like them

because the adults in his stories are not usually very nice.

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Tara's avatar

I loved his books as a child. To each their own.

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Janene's avatar

This morning I wrote down every book I hadn't written and set off to the library to find them. I have used and loved our library for years, but I came out so concerned because the library flat out didn't have any of these older titles and the series that I remember checking out when my kids were younger (truly not that terribly long ago) have all disappeared. No Rosemary Sutcliff, no Swallows and Amazons series, no Trixie Belden, no Thornton W. Burgess, etc. etc. Thank you for the very timely reminder that I need to collect more than I have been!!

I will only add one book, which is for moms, about the importance of reading to children, "Bequest of Wings" by Annis Duff - an absolutely lovely find (out of print) but if you love the sentiment of the Emily Dickinson poem (I'll try to remember it) she based it on, you'll love the book:

"He ate and drank the precious words,

His spirit grew robust. He knew no more that he was poor, or that his frame was dust.

He danced along the dingy ways, and this Bequest of Wings, was but a book,

what liberty a loosened spirit brings."

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Tara's avatar

Simply beautiful. Thank you, Janene. And thank you for your comment. It's a good prompt. I don't think most people know how quickly these treasures are being removed and replaced with the new books that tell and share a very different worldview. It's worrisome to me. Like y ou said, we all need to build our own personal libraries.

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Alli Bockmon's avatar

You had me curiously check my library for these and they have many. 11 different Rosemary Sutcliff books. 8 by Burgess. Does your library do intralibrary transfers with other branches in your state or region? It may help bridge the gap of funds (if there is one) in acquiring the physical copies to keep (if that's your goal) to borrow from other libraries. I'm lucky that there's a network all across Michigan to borrow from if my city library doesn't have what I want (but they almost always do, still.) I am going to have to do that for Rascal, as the only copy locally is on the Reference shelf, and my kiddos won't want to sit and listen AT the library to 189 pages when there are so many shelves to explore!

What a lovely quote!

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CJr's avatar

Younger kids picture books: Warm as Wool, Dakota Dugout, Billy and Blaze series, The Oxcart Man, Going to sleep on the Farm, James the Shepherd Boy, Where Are Your Shoes Mr Brown?, The Rich Man and the Shoemaker, Looking for Loons, Maple Hill Farms, Abbie Against the Storm, Read Aloud Bible Stories (whole series), James Herriot- make sure it’s the kids stories lol....his other books are great but for at least older teens/young adults.

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Emily's avatar

The billy and Blaze books are favorites of my youngest. We read them solidly on repeat for months after we got them.

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Emma's avatar

How could I forget Jan Brett? Annie and the wild animals for sure.

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Jennifer's avatar

My boys are grown but they loved Madeline L’Engle books. A Wrinkle in Time, The Wind in the Door and A Swiftly Tilting Planet. Everyone is suggesting such good books. This is great! If anyone can find a picture book called The Empty Pot by Demi you won’t be disappointed!

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Rebecca's avatar

I recently found an old copy of James Harriot at a thrift store for $4 - a treasure. Trumpet of the Swan is my son's favourite. I adored Little Women as a youngster. There was an old time travel book I adored too - I can't for the life of me recall the name. But it made me long for a time when there were morals and character! I used to be the "nerd" that stayed in from recess to help the librarian and read all the Agatha Christie.

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Kaelin Fleming's avatar

Our kids are 2 and 4, so we’re just getting started reading longer books and this list will be helpful for adding to our library! We have towers of books all across our house, our living room is more book than chair. We’re on more ‘picture’ books at the moment; Beatrix Potter, Boxcar Children, Dr. Seuss, Berenstein Bears, frog and toad, and I’m going to start reading all of the Serendipity series of children’s books to them soon. I grew up with those, and the copies that I have were my mother’s, and some of them are so well-loved to the point of fragility. Our oldest is just now starting to enjoy sitting down for longer picture-free reading sessions 🥰 Little House is where we’ll start I think. Thriftbooks has been one of our favorite places to find used copies of pretty much anything, as our local used stores are ho-hum most of the time sadly

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Beatrice van Dijk's avatar

You can start reading the Little House books aloud sooner than you might think, and there are lovely illustrated versions of some parts of them for younger children. They are not overly abridged- just extracts. And the illustrations are simple and in the style of Garth Williams. They have "Farmer Boy" books in that series too (a little more friendly for little boys). Highly recommend.

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Kaelin Fleming's avatar

It has been mostly personality that has kept us from reading them.. our girls are so busy and didn’t like sitting still for long until recently. But this winter especially we’ve been visiting the library at least 1-2 times a week and absolutely devouring books together. It’s been helping them focus, too! I’ll look for picture versions of those to get them started, that will help a lot. Farmer Boy was always my favorite in the series- my mom read that to me constantly, because it was her favorite too. Thank you!

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Amber's avatar

I’ve always read to my boys while they’re playing, it’s relaxing to me. It never fails, whether they are jumping on the trampoline or making a worm hotel, if I stop reading they will look up to see what’s the holdup :)

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Ruth Gaskovski's avatar

Another one to add would be the Piggie and Elephant series by Mo Willems. Very funny and good first readers once they are ready:)

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Kaelin Fleming's avatar

Adding to my list! Thank you 🙏🏻

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Em's avatar

Yes! Second those!

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Alli Bockmon's avatar

We loved these!

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Em's avatar

Oh I love Thriftbooks too...maybe a little too much, haha. At age 2 my kiddos were obsessed with Frog and Toad, and Little Bear - we read them every night! For ages 3-6 some books we’ve ADORED are James Herriot Childrens Treasury, Winnie the Pooh (the original!), The Lighthouse Family and Thimbleberry Stories (Cynthia Rylant has lots of lovely, sweet books!), The Little House books (but we only read the first four as Laura is 13 after that so they lost interest but want to revisit later), Charlotte’s Web (my heart!), and The Secret Garden.

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Kaelin Fleming's avatar

I have one of the James Herriot Childrens books from my own childhood, but will have to look into the others and all the rest! I’ve been collecting original Pooh books where I find them, and I didn’t even think of Little Bear books. All going on my long, long wishlist! Thank you very much 😊

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Sue's avatar

Berenstein Bears, Trixie Belden mysteries, Chronicles of Narnia, Little House, Boxcar Children, Good Morning Sun (for toddlers), Dr. Seuss, Frog and Toad

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Tonya's avatar

We love frog and toad ❤️

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Pam Voss's avatar

Love this idea. I need to go back and find that other convo. Have been out of it for a bit. We purchased most of Dr. Seuss’ books for our grand daughters once we saw what was happening. I find it so interesting in reading The Cat In The Hat, how at the end it asks, what would you do? Basically the cat walks in, creates havoc, then invites his two friends in (Thing 1&2) to wreak more havoc. Our grand daughters are young, 3 & 1 but I’ve already begun the discussion w our 3 yr old. The idea of letting someone talk you into something you’re uncomfortable with, allowing things to happen wo saying a word. I just don’t remember such a children’s book as this being rich in opportunity for great questions about morality. Thanks for this thread!

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Tara's avatar

Exactly and it's the great gift in books, isn't it? When we read something outdated or just different from our family values we can pause and discuss these things. It's an opportunity.

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Ella Aird's avatar

Not sure if you’ll be able to source this one. But I just read ‘Golden fiddle’ by mary grant Bruce, an old Australian author. It was such a beautiful story of 4 poor kids growing up on a farm but the way they work and the way they talk to each other and are grateful for the tiniest things was gorgeous

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Emily's avatar

Very rarely do I read a list like this and find so many to add that I've never heard of before. If you like L.M. Montgomery and Louisa Alcott check out Grace S. Richmond. I especially like her Red Pepper Burns series about a super Built, red headed Doctor (I am. not making this up) and his temper. I like how rational things like exercise and simple eating are included. And the dynamics of family and friends. The Listening Post is also excellent.

Gordon MacQuarrie writes humorous stories about fishing and nature - he can be hard to find but worth it.

Braiding Sweetgrass might not be everyone's cup of tea, but I love her essays on nature.

We like Gail Carson Levine and Shannon Hale as more recent authors. Also Brandon Mull is exciting.

Josephine Tey is a pen name for a few mysteries that are lovely

Now to start collecting my long list of great books I've never heard of before. So exciting!

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Deborah C's avatar

Hatchet, by Gary Paulson, was a favorite of my children.

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Jennifer Tibbitt's avatar

Yes!!

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Cassandra Brown's avatar

East of the sun west of the moon, The Education of Little Tree, the chronicles of Narnia, Juniper by Monica furlong (so magical, go find this rare book), Tom Brown's The Tracker. For little littles: All the places to love, Goodnight Moon, The legend of the white buffalo calf woman by Paul Goble. Also by Paul Goble Star Boy, The girl who loved wild horses, The Greay Race, The gift of the Sacred Dog, Buffalo Woman, All our Relatives. The legend of the indian paintbrush by Tomie dePaola. Everything by Dr. Seuss.

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Amber's avatar

Oh the Education of Little Tree. Truly life changing.

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Janene's avatar

Agreed! I remember not reading this one to my kids, but every day telling them what I'd read and we were all riveted. I did this with lots of adult books like Lorna Doone too = the kids were tiny, but super interested!

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Jennifer's avatar

The Education of Little Tree!🌟🌟🌟

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Rochelle's avatar

My children and I have read many of the books mentioned here but I recently read "The Yearling" by Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings to my children and I highly recommend. Rawlings depiction of love, how it is both sublime and gut-wrenching, stood out to me most.

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Katelyn's avatar

The Railway Children, Escape from Warsaw, the Golden Goblet, Eagle of the Ninth, Maya Daughter of the Nile, and The Island of the Blue Dolphins are all favorites I haven't seen mentioned here yet. Wonderful historical fiction that depicts children/young adults doing hard, heroic things or making difficult choices in the situations life brings them.

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Sally's avatar

We homeschooled and here are some of our favorites: Jo’s Boys and Eight Cousins by Louisa May Alcott, Elizabeth George Speare books The Witch of Blackbird Pond, The Sign of the Beaver, The Bronze Bow, Calico, Captive, Just David by Eleanor H. Porter, Wisdom and the Millers Proverbs for Children, Carry On, Mr. Bowditch by Jean Lee Latham, Rifles for Watie by Harold Keith, Understood Betsy by Dorothy Canfield Fisher, Little Pilgrim’s Progress by Helen L. Taylor, The Green Ember by S. D. Smith, Newberry Award winning books are also a good source.

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Janene's avatar

Oh I loved Witch of Blackbird Pond so much. I still remember the thrill I felt when Nat came back to rescue her - true romance and my kind of hero. It still gives me shivers :)

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JustFarmerJulie's avatar

Lord of the rings says my 11-year-old and the Trojan War says my 8-year-old, she is reading a children's adaptation by Olivia Coolidge. I also love Madeline L'Engle'ls A wrinkle in Time. For horse crazy kids anything by Margaret Henry is good. We really enjoyed the Great Horn Spoon recently, a hilarious story about Gold Rush times. And right now we are reading the Wheel on the school. This is a fun and engrossing story about a group of kids and a Dutch town who want to bring storks back to their town.

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Sarah Laucks's avatar

Marguerite Henry books are SO good! They've gotten pushed off the library shelves by the Erin Hunter books (which are an unworthy replacement).

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Emily's avatar

They really are treasures. We did a whole horse history unit from Beautiful feet books that featured most of her writing. It was so fun. Even with my not so horse crazy kids.

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Janene's avatar

Beautiful Feet has such good book lists. I loved their unit studies.

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Sally's avatar

I will have to look up Margaret Henry. Thank you!

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Sarah Laucks's avatar

My favorites are King of the Wind, Misty of Chincoteague, Brighty of the Grand Canyon, and Gaudenzia. Everything is historical fiction, so it's a great way to teach history and geography. I hope you enjoy her books!

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Sally's avatar

I remember Brighty of the Grand Canyon!

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Jessica Sipe's avatar

We just finished the most magical children’s book by Ethel Cook Eliot called The House in the Trees. It was written 100 years ago and is so relevant today. We also love Enid Blyton books of the same era.

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Liz WP's avatar

I second Rascal, my favourite as a kid. Shiloh, Fly Away Home, Swiss Family Robinson, My Side of the Mountain, Island of the Blue Dolphins.

Farmhouse School Co. reprints old books and teaches the skills used in them. I've yet to get any, but it looks likea neat option

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Sally's avatar

Island of the Blue Dolphins was my dad’s favorite which he passed on to me. Wonderful book.

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Noreen G's avatar

This is such a great thread! Thank you Tara.

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Tara's avatar

Thank you, Noreen :) It is a great list! I foresee many more used bookstore purchases for grand-babies in my future.

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Noreen G's avatar

I just looked through this thread again this morning and oh the memories! Some of these books I haven’t thought about in so many years. One I haven’t seen mentioned yet is Watership Down. I loved that and the Yearling when I was young. I read Watership Down again recently, I think it’s time to read the Yearling again too. Thanks again Tara, this is such a feel good thread. 🥰 I’m adding a bunch to my used book shopping list too.

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Emily Phillips's avatar

And how could I forget - the Redwall series by Brian Jacques

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Sally's avatar

We listened to the audiobooks on road trips! Martin the Warrior and The Legend of Luke were favorites. We read many of the books too. My son loved all the foods and feasting that took place at Redwall Abbey. Such good memories.

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Emily Phillips's avatar

We make a “Redwall dinner” once a year with some of the delicious recipes... spicy shrimp soup, baked whitefish, potato &turnip & beet & rutabaga pie, trifle, hard cider, and so on

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Sally's avatar

That’s amazing! I’m going to have to share that with my son, he will love it! Crumpets for breakfast were a favorite.

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Chelsie “thegrazinglife”'s avatar

So many great suggestions I won’t repeat. My girls are loving Roald Dahls books. We just started a book called Rump and it’s a fun twist on the story of Rumplestiltskin as a young boy. We haven’t finished it so I can’t say for sure how great it is but so far we’re loving it. If we like it, they have other stories with a twist. I remember loving Nancy Drew as a child, and Hatchet. Also, the Girl who owned a city was a favorite of mine. Those might be too old still for my 8 and under. I haven’t seen anyone mention The Tuddle Twins yet. We have those books and the kids like them as well.

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Renée's avatar

Betsey Tacy series, Brambley Hedge series (illustrations are the best), Vera the mouse (also great illustrations), strawberry girl (Lois Lenskj), number the stars (Lois Lowry) On call back mountain (Eva Bunting). These are some books that come to mind.

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Nikki's avatar

Our family loves Ralph Moody's Little Britches! We get our used books from ThriftBooks. We also have one by Raph's Uncle Frank Gould called Making of a Maine Man.

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Dwell in the Land's avatar

Hadn't heard of the one by his uncle -- will have to track it down. Thanks for sharing!

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Nikki's avatar

Ok I shouldn't rely on my memory. It's called A Maine Man in the Making. Sorry for the mix up!

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Damaris's avatar

All of Louisa May Alcott's books, Anne of Green Gables, Just So Stories, The Secret Garden, The Little Princess, James Herriott's books, Wind in the Willows, Dominic by William Steig, Treasure Island! There are so many others but these are some of the books that made my childhood magical.

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Karla's avatar

We just started the little house series, and my kids love it. The explanations of historical homesteading life are so interesting to the kids and I. It’s funny to think how many censorship opportunities there are in this book, and how much my kids can learn from hearing these things and talking about them with me. Spanking, attitudes toward “Indians”, and religion are topics that my kids don’t often get into with any real depth and understanding. I’ve adored historical fiction since I was a kid and I think there’s so much value in looking back in time.

I loved books by Jim Kjelgaard as a kid (Big Red is one) and I’ll be reading those to my littles as well. We’ve read my side of the mountain, another huge fav.

I was a book obsessed as a kid and can’t recall many other kid level books I loved, though I’m sure there were many. But I got into adult fiction by the age of 10 or 11. The Pillars of the Earth, Lord of the Rings, the Illiad and the Odyssey, Clan of the Cave Bear, all made a huge impact on me.

My 10 year old isn’t that into reading himself but he loves being read to, and we are on the Lord of the Rings right now. My kids will have to tackle some of my other childhood favourites on their own, the sex scenes could get awkward 😅

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Tara's avatar

I agree and I think that's the great joy in reading together. We get to pause and have conversations about topics that come up in a way that we might not have the same opportunity to otherwise.

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Gina Webb's avatar

What a great thread! We've been homeschooling for 18 years now (4 graduates 6 to go). Great lists. Might be amazing to start a classics list for moms? I'd love to get some inspiration!

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Emily Chevalier's avatar

We love many books as we are over a decade into homeschooling with our oldest graduating within a year. We have loved and read many of the books from the booklists on amblesideonline.org website, a Charlotte Mason based site for reading lists for all ages. We also love the Good and Beautiful book lists and some of their curriculum. We have had so much fun with the Burgess Bird Book and the Burgess Animal Book. We love their biographies, my kids find them so fun! We also love the Story Book of Science, it has helped my children observe nature with so much more depth and wonder after reading these stories. We love all the Holling Clancy Holling book series such as Pagoo, Paddle to the Sea and Beautiful Feet books website has maps to follow along to make it come alive and teach geography if you choose, othwerwise they're just beautiful stories. Anne of Green Gables is a classic. We love Jane Austen books. I could go on forever but those are some of our quick favorites over the years.

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Janene's avatar

Oh Paddle to the SEA!!!! I have it sitting on my hearth right now! His illustrations! And ambleside does have great lists!

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Alexsandra Stuart's avatar

What would you start with? I have a 3 year old and we just started velveteen rabbit, charlottes web and Winnie the Pooh but she still is very very much into picture books since she is just newly 3...

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Jennifer Tibbitt's avatar

Madeleine series, Curious George, Richard Scarry books, Beatrix Potter, Goodnight Moon, I love you Forever......

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Janene's avatar

All the Paul Galdone illustrated classics are super fun. And nursery rhymes! I read once somewhere that the meter and rhyme in Nursery Rhymes sets kids up for a lifetime of loving music and poetry. "Sing a song of sixpence," leads to Walter de la Mare, leads to Robert Frost, leads to Shakespeare.... :)

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Em's avatar

At 3 my girls were obsessed with the Little Bear books and Frog and Toad. They memorized The Wind Children by Sybil Von Olfers and most of the poems from Here’s a Little Poem by Jane Yolen.

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Macy's avatar

Oh! Speaking of books, I’m looking for recommendations on books for newborn care and/or maintaining your child’s health at home. If anyone has recommendations please share! 😊

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Brooke's avatar

my absolute favourite which I still refer to with my now 10 year old is The Nourishing Traditions Book of Baby & Child Care

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Janene's avatar

Yes, anything Nourishing Traditions/ Sally Fallon - can't go wrong. Also, look into some good books on Homeopathic medicine. I soooo wish I had know about this completely lovely form of medicine when my kids were small! ( can google Joette Calabrese or Ellen Bench)

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jennifer's avatar

Theres also this book called "how to raise a healthy child in spite of your doctor" by dr.john mendelsohn - I just got a copy on thriftbooks and its hilariously written about how much he can't stand doctors BUT it has great practical information for if your child is dealing with something that is now considered a "very dangerous childhood illness" that they inject against vs going on to google and getting freaked out. When I had a new baby I didn't understand how to know what was okay or not with a baby (as my mother was very much in the cult of big pharma and i was raised on antibiotics) so this helps me get info from a no-bs doctor originally published in 1984 and he was an older doctor then.

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Ali-K Packa's avatar

We’ve been reading The Wingfeather Saga by Andrew Peterson - my 7 and 5 year olds love it and my husband tries to listen to as much as he can after work. It would be great for teens too. Also the Seven Sleeper Series is good! Another dealing with internal struggles of good and evil.

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Erica Portia's avatar

So many good books here. A few favorites that we love:

Where the Red Fern Grows

Black Beauty

The Hatchet

Children of the New Forest

The Little Duke

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Aleah Thompson's avatar

I was scrolling to see if anyone recommend Wilson Rawls! If you love Where the Red Fern Grows, you

must check out Summer of the Monkeys. I read this book to my class every year and it was always the absolute favorite!

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Erica Portia's avatar

Thanks! I’ll check that out

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