substitute (
substitute) wrote2003-11-02 10:48 pm
I had too much to nap today.
I'm all zingy, zappy, and fizzy. I think I'll be reading late into the night.
Blueberries in nonfat yogurt make me happy.
Question of the day, following a discussion at D's about childhood reading: What book or books in childhood did you particularly love? Which one or ones did you reread multiple times? Which one would you go back and read now, as an adult?
Blueberries in nonfat yogurt make me happy.
Question of the day, following a discussion at D's about childhood reading: What book or books in childhood did you particularly love? Which one or ones did you reread multiple times? Which one would you go back and read now, as an adult?
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
Where The Wild Things Are and the Nutshell Library by Maurice Sendak.
The Encyclopedia Brown and Danny Dunn series.
And for the obscurists in the audience, Arm In Arm by Remy Charlip.
no subject
where the wild things are...
actually... they were watching the movie version a couple weeks ago at dasan's daycare when i picked him up... i couldn't have been happier.
that book rules.
also anything with a pick your own ending.
no subject
no subject
Middle years: Podkayne of Mars by Heinlein was the first SF book I ever read with a female protagonist. Up till that point I didn't think girls could do anything but mope about on the prairie in awful gingham dresses waiting to be mercifully run down by a rabid heifer, or solve really, really stupid crimes when the Hardy Boys were off doing whatever Hardy Boys do when they're unsupervised. Disobedient, crafty girls in space! I read Podkayne, probably 9 times, but none in adulthood. I should have a look at it, actually.
Slightly before teenage years: Little Women, and To Kill A Mockingbird. (beaten that topic to death lately, I know.) I read the latter once a year, pretty much.
After that I got all punky and weird and started reading crazy, forbidden things. Like Judy Blume!
no subject
when I got a bit older my Dad used to read to me from this book of shorts that he won when he was a very little boy in sunday school. The stories were really out there.
no subject
no subject
Eloise
the pobble who had no toes
the giving tree
the rainbow goblins
cloudy with a chance of meatballs
Miss Nelson is Missing
Harold and the Purple Crayon
Watch out for the Chicken feet in your soup
The Very Hungrey Caterpillar
I have to go to school or I'd add more ;)
no subject
Especially stuff like Where the wild things are, and the thief of always. Swoon
bookssssssssssss
Where the Red Fern Grows
To Kill a Mockingbird (which I still re-read at least once a year)
Old Yeller
White Fang
Anything Roald Dahl wrote for children, and those are very different years later (especially after having learned more about him and read his adult stories).
Where the Wild Things Are (I think it's telling how often this comes up.)
The Encyclopedia Brown series (though that's something you definitely grow out of).
The Little Prince (which I definitely did not get as a child and enjoy more and more every time)
E.B. White, Shel Silverstein, etc. etc.
I repeatedly checked out the only book on Norse mythology in my middle school library.
Re: bookssssssssssss
I might have thought that too, had there not been an article on him in the Onion a while back... :-)
The Case of the Crazy Shit
no subject
no subject
no subject
Charlie and the Chocolate Factory
Charlie and the Great Glass Elevator
Phantom Tollbooth
A Wrinkle in Time (I never read the other books in the series)
Anything Jules Verne
Anything H.G. Wells
There was an Asimov series called "Robot City," as I recall, that was not actually written by Asimov and was aimed for teens and kids that I enjoyed. I think they were mostly mysteries, and specifically locked-room mysteries. I'm not so sure about the preset re-read value, though.
I had a teacher read us aloud "The 21 Balloons," but I never retained the name of the book, so all through my teens and adulthood, I would have little flashback memories to the story, but be aggravated because I could never remember what it was. About a year ago, I did one of my pretty-much-yearly web searches for the book and finally found the title! It was quickly ordered from Amazon, read in an evening, and made me a very happy little monkey.
no subject
no subject