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debm55

(56,492 posts)
Sun Jan 18, 2026, 02:40 PM 15 hrs ago

As a child, what was you favorite book that you read? Mine was Mary Poppins. What was yours?

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As a child, what was you favorite book that you read? Mine was Mary Poppins. What was yours? (Original Post) debm55 15 hrs ago OP
Where the Wild Things are Sun-Moon 15 hrs ago #1
Thank you , Sun-Moon. I read that book to my class. debm55 14 hrs ago #3
The Black Stallion, I just loved that book. Diamond_Dog 15 hrs ago #2
Thank you very much for sharing with us. Diamond_Dog. Also,read to my class. I did a Teacher Read classics for my class. debm55 14 hrs ago #4
Reading aloud is a lost art, good for you Deb! Diamond_Dog 14 hrs ago #6
Thank you very much, Diamond _Dog. debm55 14 hrs ago #8
Me, too! pandr32 14 hrs ago #11
The Sound and the Fury by William Faulkner True Dough 14 hrs ago #5
Thank you very much for sharing with us. TrueDough. debm55 14 hrs ago #7
Yoknapatawpha County True Dough 14 hrs ago #9
I don't remember that one. Thank you for sharing. True Dough. debm55 14 hrs ago #12
That's where The Sound and the Fury was set, deb. True Dough 14 hrs ago #15
Thank you Thank you. A recommendation for you would be Hatchet or Julie of the Wolves. Chrispin, or The Island of the debm55 14 hrs ago #19
Oh, I just love it when you are loquacious 🤭 Polly Hennessey 14 hrs ago #26
How unusual True Dough 13 hrs ago #38
Dang. That was a tough go for me in high school Easterncedar 13 hrs ago #53
You read it as a kid? The Blue Flower 12 hrs ago #61
Psst... True Dough 12 hrs ago #66
Yes don't flatter yourself. And use the sarcasm emoji. debm55 9 hrs ago #78
Oh, look at that! There's a sarcasm emoji! Will I use it? True Dough 9 hrs ago #80
You should .if what you are posting is sarcasm. That is why it is there. debm55 9 hrs ago #82
What about these other ones? True Dough 9 hrs ago #83
I grew up with lots of favorites. pandr32 14 hrs ago #10
Wonderful selections, Thank you for sharing with us. pandr32. debm55 14 hrs ago #16
Go Dog Go! I loved the big dog party in the canopy of the tree. applegrove 14 hrs ago #13
Thank you very much applegrove. Thank you for sharing your book selection debm55 14 hrs ago #17
I also loved Go Dog Go and could read it before I went to school Diamond_Dog 14 hrs ago #20
I was 4 at Montesori. I don't think I ever read it until I read it to my nieces and nephews. applegrove 14 hrs ago #21
My mother was a reading teacher Diamond_Dog 14 hrs ago #22
My grandmother taught me to read 3 letter words applegrove 14 hrs ago #27
Charlotte's Web. mucifer 14 hrs ago #14
Thank you very much. I cried at the end of book. But it is a classic. Thank you mucifer. debm55 14 hrs ago #18
"Wind in the Willows." n/t malthaussen 14 hrs ago #23
Thank you very much, malthaussen. I loved that classic. debm55 14 hrs ago #25
The Secret Garden MoonlightHillFarm 14 hrs ago #24
Thank you very much, MoonlightHillFarm ----another classic. debm55 14 hrs ago #28
Still a favorite Easterncedar 13 hrs ago #55
For me always and forever, The Secret Garden. Polly Hennessey 14 hrs ago #29
Thank you Polly Hennessey for sharing with us. I loved it too debm55 13 hrs ago #34
Two books, both biographies no_hypocrisy 13 hrs ago #30
Wonderful , outstanding books, Thank you, no_hypocrisy, I read the second book in my classroom. Classic books debm55 13 hrs ago #36
I *STILL* have both in my library. no_hypocrisy 10 hrs ago #75
I had other books twenty copies of each that we would read together or in reading groups. I took them when I left debm55 7 hrs ago #96
Constantly reading so I will guess MuseRider 13 hrs ago #31
Sorry...BOOK MuseRider 13 hrs ago #33
Thank you very much, MuseRider. for sharing with us. debm55 13 hrs ago #37
Anne of Green Gables dflprincess 13 hrs ago #32
Yes. outstanding book that is a Classic because it held up over generations and time.Thank you dflprincess. debm55 13 hrs ago #40
My favorite childhood book too - Anne the red headed orphan womanofthehills 5 hrs ago #100
Mike Mulligan and the Steam shovel and all of Virginia Lee Burton's other stories Chasstev365 13 hrs ago #35
I read that book to my son. Brings back memories. Thank you Chasstev365 debm55 13 hrs ago #44
As I got older, I loved Nancy Drew, but as a kid I loved The Cricket in Times Square. terip64 13 hrs ago #39
Thank you very much, terip64. I two loved the Nancy Drew series and the Cricket in Times Square. debm55 13 hrs ago #48
I can't believe someone said what was going to be my answer. Xavier Breath 8 hrs ago #88
Any of the Nancy Drew or Hardy Boys mysteries Ritabert 13 hrs ago #41
Thank you so much. My local library had the complete set of both. They were free at the time. So I read and read. to my debm55 13 hrs ago #49
Charlottes Web samplegirl 13 hrs ago #42
All of the above plus... 2naSalit 13 hrs ago #43
Thank you very much, 2naSalit. I remember reading through the shelves at our mill town Carnegie Library. Little Women, debm55 13 hrs ago #47
We were... 2naSalit 13 hrs ago #50
The Hobbit/LOTR! buzzycrumbhunger 13 hrs ago #45
"The Wind in the Willows". Still have it on my bokshelf. sinkingfeeling 13 hrs ago #46
The Enormous Egg Mz Pip 13 hrs ago #51
A Wrinkle in Time, The Secret Garden Easterncedar 13 hrs ago #52
The Black Stallion biophile 13 hrs ago #54
Thank you very much, biophile. I agree with you about the sad places in the book. Reading a book you bond with the debm55 12 hrs ago #60
The Saggy, Baggy Elephant SheltieLover 13 hrs ago #56
Misty of Chincoteague. I loved that book. n/t livetohike 13 hrs ago #57
Bread and Jam for Frances choie 13 hrs ago #58
The Boxcar Children PJMcK 12 hrs ago #59
The World Book Encyclopedia. greatauntoftriplets 12 hrs ago #62
I loved reading the World Book yellowdogintexas 3 hrs ago #102
As a younger child I liked reading the Golden Books series. Endlessmike56 12 hrs ago #63
Franz: a Dog of Police Rhiagel 12 hrs ago #64
Great topic. Harriet the Spy Alpeduez21 12 hrs ago #65
Two series of books, The Sci-fi/fantasy books by Andre Norton and the Tom Swift books by Victor Appleton. wcmagumba 12 hrs ago #67
Little Shepherd of Kingdom Come UpInArms 12 hrs ago #68
The Phantom Tollbooth surrealAmerican 12 hrs ago #69
likewise jgo 6 hrs ago #98
The Time Machine and War of the Worlds. H. G. Wells was ahead of his time. Borogove 12 hrs ago #70
Treasure Island, Robert Louis Stevenson Onthefly 12 hrs ago #71
Thank you very much, Onthefly. Loved that story. debm55 6 hrs ago #97
Cherry Ames series zeusdogmom 12 hrs ago #72
Excellent selections, especially the second.Thank you for sharing with us. Three Came Home lit a spark in you. Sometimes debm55 7 hrs ago #95
Kim by Rudyard Kipling chowmama 11 hrs ago #73
Thank you very much for sharing with us.chowmama. Love your selection. debm55 7 hrs ago #94
Salem's Lot. Read it many times by age 12. (n/t) OldBaldy1701E 11 hrs ago #74
Thank you OldBaldy1701E for sharing with us. debm55 7 hrs ago #93
Half Magic by Edward Eager nikatnyte 9 hrs ago #76
Thank you very much, nikatnyte. Half Magic. sounds very interesting. debm55 8 hrs ago #91
The Jungle Book FullySupportDems 9 hrs ago #77
Thank you very much, FullySupportDems. debm55 9 hrs ago #79
Anderson's Fairy Tales, 1930 edition some_of_us_are_sane 9 hrs ago #81
Thank you very much for sharing that Fairy Tale . Wonderful. Thank you some_of_us_are_sane debm55 7 hrs ago #92
So many possibilities. 3catwoman3 8 hrs ago #84
A Wrinkle inTime is a great book. I have never seen the movies, but have read it to my class and they loved it as did I debm55 8 hrs ago #89
I'm thinking National Velvet, Black Beauty. But very soon after... electric_blue68 8 hrs ago #85
Thank you very much electric_blue68. I couldn't remember the name of another book I read and it was "A Wrinkle in Time" debm55 8 hrs ago #86
Little house on the prairie ExtraGriz 8 hrs ago #87
Thank you very much, ExtraGritz for your two selections. Excellent choices debm55 8 hrs ago #90
"The Hobbit". I got a copy after seeing the animated TV version in 1978. Aristus 5 hrs ago #99
The Betsy-Tacy books, set in Minnesota. LisaM 4 hrs ago #101
There were several favorites yellowdogintexas 3 hrs ago #103
Two actually - Charlotte's Web and Anna and the King of Siam. nt woodsprite 3 hrs ago #104
Tom Sawyer.. Permanut 2 hrs ago #105
ZOTS multigraincracker 51 min ago #106

debm55

(56,492 posts)
4. Thank you very much for sharing with us. Diamond_Dog. Also,read to my class. I did a Teacher Read classics for my class.
Sun Jan 18, 2026, 02:50 PM
14 hrs ago

Diamond_Dog

(39,864 posts)
6. Reading aloud is a lost art, good for you Deb!
Sun Jan 18, 2026, 02:53 PM
14 hrs ago

My 4th grade teacher read aloud to us The Boxcar Children and Little House books. I liked that too.

True Dough

(25,952 posts)
15. That's where The Sound and the Fury was set, deb.
Sun Jan 18, 2026, 03:03 PM
14 hrs ago

I was just elaborating a little. It's Sunday, I'm loquacious.

debm55

(56,492 posts)
19. Thank you Thank you. A recommendation for you would be Hatchet or Julie of the Wolves. Chrispin, or The Island of the
Sun Jan 18, 2026, 03:09 PM
14 hrs ago

Blue Dolphin or The Yearling.

The Blue Flower

(6,365 posts)
61. You read it as a kid?
Sun Jan 18, 2026, 04:53 PM
12 hrs ago

I found it difficult as an adult, and I was an English major. I'm impressed.

True Dough

(25,952 posts)
66. Psst...
Sun Jan 18, 2026, 05:06 PM
12 hrs ago

Sometimes I'm guilty of exaggerating and using sarcasm here on the DU for comedic effect (not always successful, mind you).

This may be one of those occasions.

pandr32

(13,832 posts)
10. I grew up with lots of favorites.
Sun Jan 18, 2026, 02:59 PM
14 hrs ago

There isn't one better than others because so many were wonderful and memorable.
Just some:
Treasure Island
The Pearl, The Pony (both short, but wow!)
The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe
Jean Val Jean (a condensed book from Les Miserables)
Little Women
Any and all fairy tales

applegrove

(130,561 posts)
13. Go Dog Go! I loved the big dog party in the canopy of the tree.
Sun Jan 18, 2026, 03:01 PM
14 hrs ago

My Montesori teacher would prompt me to get a book and I always got that one much to her sagrin.

applegrove

(130,561 posts)
21. I was 4 at Montesori. I don't think I ever read it until I read it to my nieces and nephews.
Sun Jan 18, 2026, 03:29 PM
14 hrs ago

I leart to read later than 4 and my parents didn't have the book.

Diamond_Dog

(39,864 posts)
22. My mother was a reading teacher
Sun Jan 18, 2026, 03:33 PM
14 hrs ago

But it took zero effort on her part to make me a bookworm!

applegrove

(130,561 posts)
27. My grandmother taught me to read 3 letter words
Sun Jan 18, 2026, 03:44 PM
14 hrs ago

when i was 5 but I just memorized them. In grade one I did the same thing in French. Total memorization of words. I still don't get phonics at all. When l learn a phonics rule today, I try, I can't remember it after a period of time. My spelling and proof-reading is atrotious. I can't read novel words. I've taken many english classes to try and learn grammar but to no avail. I am a total dyslexic but I love to read, particularly non fiction. I don't always get all the themes in a book but my general knowledge increases with each book I read as novel ideas sink in.

debm55

(56,492 posts)
18. Thank you very much. I cried at the end of book. But it is a classic. Thank you mucifer.
Sun Jan 18, 2026, 03:06 PM
14 hrs ago

no_hypocrisy

(54,403 posts)
30. Two books, both biographies
Sun Jan 18, 2026, 03:48 PM
13 hrs ago
The Story of Helen Keller Lorena Hickok (yes, the journalist who was besties with Eleanor Roosevelt, and

Helen Keller's Teacher (Anne Sullivan). ?c=1

debm55

(56,492 posts)
36. Wonderful , outstanding books, Thank you, no_hypocrisy, I read the second book in my classroom. Classic books
Sun Jan 18, 2026, 03:55 PM
13 hrs ago

debm55

(56,492 posts)
96. I had other books twenty copies of each that we would read together or in reading groups. I took them when I left
Sun Jan 18, 2026, 10:31 PM
7 hrs ago

teaching and donated them to a grade school in s poor school district next to mine. I kept one copy of each for myself.Do you ever go back and reread them. I like to do that.

MuseRider

(35,144 posts)
31. Constantly reading so I will guess
Sun Jan 18, 2026, 03:49 PM
13 hrs ago

it was of the Albert Payson Terhune dog books. I was totally taken by them. I read lots and lots but those were my favorites.

In Jr. high and up it was more Sci Fi and Fantasy.

dflprincess

(29,192 posts)
32. Anne of Green Gables
Sun Jan 18, 2026, 03:49 PM
13 hrs ago

At the time it amazed me that both my grandmother & mother had read it when they were kids. (It was a new book when grandma read it).

debm55

(56,492 posts)
40. Yes. outstanding book that is a Classic because it held up over generations and time.Thank you dflprincess.
Sun Jan 18, 2026, 03:59 PM
13 hrs ago

womanofthehills

(10,725 posts)
100. My favorite childhood book too - Anne the red headed orphan
Mon Jan 19, 2026, 12:41 AM
5 hrs ago

I read the whole Anne of Green Gables series. Starts when she is 10 and I remember reading about her wedding.

I went back and reread the first book. Anne is in almost every chapter accused of something she did not do - so you instantly feel so sad for Anne.

Once in grade school, a teacher accused me of something another kid did. I almost could not believe something like that could ever happen to me - I felt like Anne.

My daughter was really into the Dorrie the Witch series. So into Dorrie That after I read her all the series, I had to make up a Dorrie the Witch story to tell her every night before bed.

terip64

(1,603 posts)
39. As I got older, I loved Nancy Drew, but as a kid I loved The Cricket in Times Square.
Sun Jan 18, 2026, 03:58 PM
13 hrs ago

debm55

(56,492 posts)
48. Thank you very much, terip64. I two loved the Nancy Drew series and the Cricket in Times Square.
Sun Jan 18, 2026, 04:23 PM
13 hrs ago

Xavier Breath

(6,517 posts)
88. I can't believe someone said what was going to be my answer.
Sun Jan 18, 2026, 09:35 PM
8 hrs ago

I had a paperback version that was dog-eared from multiple readings.

debm55

(56,492 posts)
49. Thank you so much. My local library had the complete set of both. They were free at the time. So I read and read. to my
Sun Jan 18, 2026, 04:26 PM
13 hrs ago

hearts content.

2naSalit

(100,305 posts)
43. All of the above plus...
Sun Jan 18, 2026, 04:12 PM
13 hrs ago

Heidi. It was probably the last of that sort of literature I remember reading.

debm55

(56,492 posts)
47. Thank you very much, 2naSalit. I remember reading through the shelves at our mill town Carnegie Library. Little Women,
Sun Jan 18, 2026, 04:20 PM
13 hrs ago

Heidi. Pollyanna, .

2naSalit

(100,305 posts)
50. We were...
Sun Jan 18, 2026, 04:27 PM
13 hrs ago

A reading family, we went to the library often and had a small library at home as did my grandparents. Theirs was much larger. We also had teachers read to us in school back then. Also traveling thespian troupes who would come and perform some of the stories we knew and some we didn't already know. Schools really were quite good back in the the northeast in the 1960s.

buzzycrumbhunger

(1,681 posts)
45. The Hobbit/LOTR!
Sun Jan 18, 2026, 04:16 PM
13 hrs ago

Still a big fave. I was so jealous in later years when a virtual friend told me her dad had traveled a lot to the UK and had sent her first editions of the entire series.

Of course, the movies were so well done, they did nothing but cement the stories as my all-time fave.I still wish I were an elf.

Mz Pip

(28,366 posts)
51. The Enormous Egg
Sun Jan 18, 2026, 04:31 PM
13 hrs ago

when I was little.
Then I became a Nancy Drew fanatic, along with every horse themed book, The Black Stallion books, Flame, National Velvet. I read them all.

Easterncedar

(5,603 posts)
52. A Wrinkle in Time, The Secret Garden
Sun Jan 18, 2026, 04:31 PM
13 hrs ago

The Little Princess, Little Women, Eight Cousins, Parsifal Rides a Time Wave, Joe's Boys, The Princess and The Goblin, The Wolves of Willoughby Chase, At the Back of the North Wind, Heidi....

I loved to read.

debm55

(56,492 posts)
60. Thank you very much, biophile. I agree with you about the sad places in the book. Reading a book you bond with the
Sun Jan 18, 2026, 04:52 PM
12 hrs ago

Characters, I did read Black Beauty, Old Yeller and The Yearling. but I still loved. the books.

choie

(6,689 posts)
58. Bread and Jam for Frances
Sun Jan 18, 2026, 04:46 PM
13 hrs ago

Bartolomew and the oobleck (dr. Seuss)

Winnie the Pooh

Babar

Little House books

PJMcK

(24,803 posts)
59. The Boxcar Children
Sun Jan 18, 2026, 04:50 PM
12 hrs ago

Their adventures and mysteries captivated me in elementary school. There were lots of books in the series!

Endlessmike56

(129 posts)
63. As a younger child I liked reading the Golden Books series.
Sun Jan 18, 2026, 04:57 PM
12 hrs ago

When I got older it was Call of the Wild by Jack London.

Rhiagel

(1,839 posts)
64. Franz: a Dog of Police
Sun Jan 18, 2026, 04:58 PM
12 hrs ago

2nd grade. It was the thickest book I saw in the library, so i went for it.

Alpeduez21

(2,013 posts)
65. Great topic. Harriet the Spy
Sun Jan 18, 2026, 04:58 PM
12 hrs ago

Which I took as part fiction part instruction manual

Lord of the Rings
The Alfred Hitchcock boys series
The Mad Scientists Club
The Great Brain series

wcmagumba

(5,713 posts)
67. Two series of books, The Sci-fi/fantasy books by Andre Norton and the Tom Swift books by Victor Appleton.
Sun Jan 18, 2026, 05:13 PM
12 hrs ago

Also, books by A. E. van Vogt were favorites...Sorry, I can't pick just one...maybe, "A Wrinkle in Time" by Madeleine L'Engle.

zeusdogmom

(1,126 posts)
72. Cherry Ames series
Sun Jan 18, 2026, 05:40 PM
12 hrs ago

She was the most amazing nurse to my 9 year old eyes.

But the book that probably made the greatest impression on me was Three Came Home by Agnes Newton Keith, a memoir detailing her experiences as a civilian prisoner in a Japanese interment camp in North Borneo and Sarawak during WW2. My sixth grade teacher read it aloud to the class every day after noon recess. I remember borrowing the book from the teacher so I could actually read it again. Pretty heavy subject matter for 11 year olds.

debm55

(56,492 posts)
95. Excellent selections, especially the second.Thank you for sharing with us. Three Came Home lit a spark in you. Sometimes
Sun Jan 18, 2026, 10:12 PM
7 hrs ago

I like to go back and reread the stories that i read to my classes even if they were for 5, and 6 grade. To read it as a 70 year old. with a different view of life. They still speak to the heart and soul.

chowmama

(1,018 posts)
73. Kim by Rudyard Kipling
Sun Jan 18, 2026, 05:48 PM
11 hrs ago

And Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court by Twain.

Also cookbooks and anything by Andre Norton.

nikatnyte

(340 posts)
76. Half Magic by Edward Eager
Sun Jan 18, 2026, 07:49 PM
9 hrs ago

A captivating book about four children in middle America of the 1920s finding a magic charm that only grants half of their wishes--but they never know which half it will be!

FullySupportDems

(413 posts)
77. The Jungle Book
Sun Jan 18, 2026, 08:00 PM
9 hrs ago

And before that, Heidi. The mountains and the jungle lived in my imagination. My earliest one was The Tent. I wish I could find that one now, it was a very simple early reader, and still funny.

But maybe I should say The Hobbit and LOTR, because they were magic and I was absorbed for many months.

Thanks for the fun trip down memory lane Deb! 😊

some_of_us_are_sane

(2,817 posts)
81. Anderson's Fairy Tales, 1930 edition
Sun Jan 18, 2026, 08:34 PM
9 hrs ago

Last edited Sun Jan 18, 2026, 09:53 PM - Edit history (1)

I read it while I recuperated from whooping cough for six weeks when I was in third grade and staying with my godmother and godfather so my brother and sister didn't catch it. My aunt Anna had this lovely BIG old book of fairy tales and I fell in love with it! Read it cover to cover...."The Wild Swans", "The Snow Queen', "The Tinder Box".... man, I DISAPPEARED into those stories!



(Oops! Had to edit.)

debm55

(56,492 posts)
92. Thank you very much for sharing that Fairy Tale . Wonderful. Thank you some_of_us_are_sane
Sun Jan 18, 2026, 09:48 PM
7 hrs ago

3catwoman3

(28,685 posts)
84. So many possibilities.
Sun Jan 18, 2026, 09:03 PM
8 hrs ago

My mom was the oldest of 4 - 3 girls, then a boy. The book was given to her when she was about 10, in 1932+/-, and was purchased at a Dayton's department store somewhere in Minnesota, based on a teeny tiny sticker on one of the front pages. She and both her sisters read the book many, many times, and some of the pages have seriously tattered edges, and others are tear-stained from where they all cried over some of the sad parts of the story - or so I was told.

My grandmother had the book re-bound for me in 1963, at the Hutchinson (MN) Maplewood Book Bindery - that is noted in ink, in her handwriting about 3 pages in, under mother's name and street address written in pencil, probably in my mother's somewhat childish hand.

The book has 12 illustrations, including the one on the cover. The artist was a C M Burd - Clara Miller Burd, born in 1873. The cover and 3 of the others illustrations are in color. One B&W illustration page is missing -according to the list of illustrations, there is supposed to be one on page 230, but there isn't. Page 230 is present, but is all print, no picture. She did the illustrations for Little Women in 1925. She also did work in stained glass, and for a time worked for Louis Tiffany of the famous Tiffany lamps.

This book will soon be 100 years old. I consider it a family treasure. An antiques seller on Etsy is offering this same edition for $140.00.

I also loved Madeleine L'Engle's A Wrinkle In Time. I always thought it would make a great movie, and I know 2 versions have been made. I've not seen either of them, as my mind has created such vivid images of all the characters that I'm quite sure I would be disappointed in the movies. I know the 2018 version shows the 3 old ladies as looking rather glamorous, which they definitely do not in the book, and the Murray family was cast as biracial, which makes it impossible for Mrs. Murray to have the flaming red hair and violet eyes that L'Engle so often refers to in the book.

debm55

(56,492 posts)
89. A Wrinkle inTime is a great book. I have never seen the movies, but have read it to my class and they loved it as did I
Sun Jan 18, 2026, 09:37 PM
8 hrs ago

Thank you very much 3catwoman3 for sharing with us.

electric_blue68

(26,088 posts)
85. I'm thinking National Velvet, Black Beauty. But very soon after...
Sun Jan 18, 2026, 09:18 PM
8 hrs ago

I think I saw my first Science Fiction Book - a paperback on my dad's side of my folks bureau. Early 1960's.

Having already been exposed by TV's Million Dollar Movie to Forbidden Planet, a few atomic monster movies (but not the Japanese ones), Twilight Zone, and The original Outer Limits (usually; eeeks!) but not yet to Star Trek... I was intrigued!
Didn't understand it all (the paperback), but on my way to bering hooked! And then came "A Wrinkle in Time".

debm55

(56,492 posts)
86. Thank you very much electric_blue68. I couldn't remember the name of another book I read and it was "A Wrinkle in Time"
Sun Jan 18, 2026, 09:31 PM
8 hrs ago

My class loved it.

Aristus

(71,753 posts)
99. "The Hobbit". I got a copy after seeing the animated TV version in 1978.
Mon Jan 19, 2026, 12:00 AM
5 hrs ago

I was ten. It was the longest book I had ever read all the way through at the time. I became a JRR Tolkien fan on the spot.

Nowadays, I have paperback reading copy, the limited hardback edition with slipcover, the annotated version, an edition illustrated with watercolor paintings, a German-language edition, and one in Latin.

I like “The Hobbit”, is what I’m saying…

LisaM

(29,505 posts)
101. The Betsy-Tacy books, set in Minnesota.
Mon Jan 19, 2026, 01:01 AM
4 hrs ago

Interestingly, two of them, kind of rare for the time, deal with prejudice against Syrian immigrants. The books are set between about 1897 and 1918, and they are semi-auto-biographical, so the author, Maud Hart Lovelace, was recounting real events. The Syrians in her home town, Mankato, lived in a part of town called Timcomville (sp) but she called it Little Syria in the books. When I was little, I thought it was pronounced like "Sigh-REE-ah".

yellowdogintexas

(23,598 posts)
103. There were several favorites
Mon Jan 19, 2026, 02:09 AM
3 hrs ago

Tom Sawyer I must have read it 5 or 6 times
Hans Brinker or The Silver Skates
Treasure Island
Kidnapped
Nancy Drew
Bobbsey Twins
All fairy tales
Mythology stories
Eight Cousins and the sequel Rose In Bloom
Little Women
Life Among the Savages and Raising Demons
Seuss any and all
Babar I still love Babar!!!

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