Chapter books.
Sep. 30th, 2008 10:51 pmI've recently started reading chapter books to Alex.
Her attention span for books is good - for example, she can stay interested in long fairy tales that have a high text-to-picture ratio. So I started keeping my eyes open for longer books that we could read, a chapter or two at a time.
My first thought was The Complete Tales of Winnie-the-Pooh. We tried a few of the stories, and she seemed to enjoy them well enough. But I realized that the humor in many of the stories is over her head. "Winnie-the-Pooh and the Bee Tree," sure, or the one where he gets stuck in Rabbit's hole after eating too much honey. But a lot of the stories are more subtle. Maybe in a couple of years...
My Father's Dragon, by Ruth Stiles Gannett, is a book I never read as a child but have frequently seen recommended as a good first chapter book. I picked up a copy on my Wild Woman Weekend, with the idea that we'd go through its 77 pages a chapter or two at a time. Alex had different ideas. We wound up reading the whole book in one big gulp. It really is a perfect chapter book for a preschooler: action-packed, funny, suspenseful and exciting without being scary. The day after we finished it, she lay with it on the couch retelling it to herself, using the pictures to prompt her memory. She'd clearly taken in quite a lot. Fortunately, there are sequels.
Now we're trying out Little House in the Big Woods, by Laura Ingalls Wilder. We've read two chapters so far, one per night. I'm skipping over some of the more long-winded descriptions. Alex really seems to like it - we've read some of the "My First Little House" picture book series, and so she was excited to have a whole long book about Laura and Mary.
It's hard to think of good chapter books for a 3.5-year-old. Alex may be a smart kid with a big vocabulary, but she lacks the life experience needed to make sense out of most books aimed at older children. And I don't really want to introduce scary or violent themes at this age. Internet discussions of what books people read to their preschoolers have often not been tremendously helpful. (You read The Hobbit to your three-year-old? Really? And The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe? Either my kid is sheltered and unsophisticated, or your kids are baby geniuses, or you're lying about how much they got out of it.)
Does anyone have any recommendations? I was thinking maybe Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle could come next, but it would probably be good to find some books that were written less than 50 years ago, for the sake of variety.
Her attention span for books is good - for example, she can stay interested in long fairy tales that have a high text-to-picture ratio. So I started keeping my eyes open for longer books that we could read, a chapter or two at a time.
My first thought was The Complete Tales of Winnie-the-Pooh. We tried a few of the stories, and she seemed to enjoy them well enough. But I realized that the humor in many of the stories is over her head. "Winnie-the-Pooh and the Bee Tree," sure, or the one where he gets stuck in Rabbit's hole after eating too much honey. But a lot of the stories are more subtle. Maybe in a couple of years...
My Father's Dragon, by Ruth Stiles Gannett, is a book I never read as a child but have frequently seen recommended as a good first chapter book. I picked up a copy on my Wild Woman Weekend, with the idea that we'd go through its 77 pages a chapter or two at a time. Alex had different ideas. We wound up reading the whole book in one big gulp. It really is a perfect chapter book for a preschooler: action-packed, funny, suspenseful and exciting without being scary. The day after we finished it, she lay with it on the couch retelling it to herself, using the pictures to prompt her memory. She'd clearly taken in quite a lot. Fortunately, there are sequels.
Now we're trying out Little House in the Big Woods, by Laura Ingalls Wilder. We've read two chapters so far, one per night. I'm skipping over some of the more long-winded descriptions. Alex really seems to like it - we've read some of the "My First Little House" picture book series, and so she was excited to have a whole long book about Laura and Mary.
It's hard to think of good chapter books for a 3.5-year-old. Alex may be a smart kid with a big vocabulary, but she lacks the life experience needed to make sense out of most books aimed at older children. And I don't really want to introduce scary or violent themes at this age. Internet discussions of what books people read to their preschoolers have often not been tremendously helpful. (You read The Hobbit to your three-year-old? Really? And The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe? Either my kid is sheltered and unsophisticated, or your kids are baby geniuses, or you're lying about how much they got out of it.)
Does anyone have any recommendations? I was thinking maybe Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle could come next, but it would probably be good to find some books that were written less than 50 years ago, for the sake of variety.
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Date: 2008-10-01 02:57 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-10-01 02:58 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-10-01 02:58 am (UTC)I didn't understand a lick of it, but I loved him reading to me.
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Date: 2008-10-01 02:59 am (UTC)http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Milly-Molly-Mandy
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Date: 2008-10-01 03:04 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-10-01 03:05 am (UTC)I don't have a very clear picture in my mind of the Just-So stories. *Gutenbergs (http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/etext01/jusss10.txt)* Hmm. It's maybe a little, ah, precious for my taste. I don't know how well it would go over, but we can see.
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Date: 2008-10-01 03:06 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-10-01 03:07 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-10-01 03:10 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-10-01 03:11 am (UTC)But you do need to check the copyright pages--many of the classics have begun to be abridged. I had a devil of a time finding an uncut Wind in the Willows. (Oh yeah! Wind in the Willows!)
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Date: 2008-10-01 03:11 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-10-01 03:12 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-10-01 03:14 am (UTC)They're not so much chapter books as collections of different medium-sized excerpts from longer books, so if she really likes some of them, you could then go find the full tales for her. They're grouped according to story type: fairy tales, holiday stories, "In Your Own Backyard," which did have a Laura Ingalls Wilder story in it, myths and legends, and so on. If you can find the set, I would recommend those.
I would also recommend almost anything Enid Blyton: Mr Pinkwhistle, Mr Meddle, and the Adventures of Pip shouldn't go over her head. The Wishing Chair stories should be good too.
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Date: 2008-10-01 03:18 am (UTC)Pooh was popular. (We had a family set of a large cloth with the Hundred Acre Wood places painted on it, and little cloth dolls for each character, that could be moved around.)
Alice in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass when I was not too much older - the latter in a volume that had the chess layouts for each chapter, so you could see her progression.
My father read me Asterix books quite regularly.
Bartholomew and the Oobleck (about which there is a hilarious family story involving the Blizzard of 78, which happened when I was about 3 and a quarter.)
Pippi Longstocking. Heidi. Greek myths. (Ok, I had a weird childhood: I do not necessarily recommend this one quite this early - I *did* get pretty close to the adult versions.) E. Nesbit. Various other early part of 20th century children's writers. All of the Mary Poppins books. Narnia.
My brother, when I was not too much older, got a copy of Italo Calvino's _Italian Fairy Tales_ and would read me a few each night (most of them are really short - a few paragraphs - and he was, in hindsight, carefully skipping the really gruesome ones, which is easy when you can skim through them fast.)
I wouldn't worry too much about 'not getting the adult amusement' - as far as I can tell, that's a bonus for the adult reading, and as long as the child is enjoying it, it doesn't matter that they're not getting the whole plot, etc.
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Date: 2008-10-01 03:21 am (UTC)Also, to go along with Charlotte's Web perhaps Stuart Little and The Trumpet of the Swan? I remember having those read to me when I was small, but I don't recall how small.
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Date: 2008-10-01 03:21 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-10-01 03:21 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-10-01 03:28 am (UTC)Have you seen Zen Shorts? I forget who wrote it, and it may be too short for these purposes, but it may fit the bill for a rainy afternoon.
I think The Moffats, by Eleanor Estes might be good, but they aren't recent. Ditto Ramona Quimby. Have you looked at Anastasia Krupnik by Lois Lowry? It's a bit of a '70s period piece, and you definitely want to read it yourself first to see how you think Alex would take it (Anastasia's mom has a baby, which Anastasia has some pretty strong opposition to, and Anastasia's grandmother has Alzheimer's and dies), but it might work.
In paging through juvenile fiction on Amazon, I have just run up against The Illyrian Adventure by Lloyd Alexander. I suspect that it will be some years yet before this book is interesting to Alex, and the front cover of the latest edition is a disgrace - they've done their best to invoke Lara Croft and Indiana Jones, and fetched up at de-sexed pulp novel. If you ran across it in a bookstore, you would put it aside, and that would be sad. One day, Alex will be just the right age for a heroine who swears fluently in a dozen languages and prefers mental math to a slide rule, and on that day, you will want this book.
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Date: 2008-10-01 03:34 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-10-01 03:36 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-10-01 03:39 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-10-01 04:26 am (UTC)John Erikson has a series of books that are just as good for the adults reading them as the kids listening--Hank the Cowdog (http://www.hankthecowdog.com/). Like the Buggs Bunny cartoons when we were little, most of the jokes are over little kids' heads, but the stories and characters are engaging and funny.
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Date: 2008-10-01 04:27 am (UTC)I totally get where you're coming from on the need to avoid violence and scariness, though. I had an enthusiastic early reader and finding books that were interesting yet age-appropriate was surprisingly hard.
Molly really loved the Ramona series by Beverly Clearly as read-aloud books when she was in preschool. They are hilarious and approachable and surprisingly up-to-date considering how old most of them are. (There's this scene in one of them where Ramona's parents forget to start the crock pot, get home to no dinner, make pancakes instead, and snipe at each other until they blow up. It's painfully hilarious, because I think I've had more or less that fight....and that books is almost as old as I am.) She also really loved Tales of a Fourth Grade Nothing and its sequels by Judy Blume, although she clearly identified with Fudge and he inspired all sorts of misbehavior. (At least she didn't eat anyone's turtle.)
Junie B. Jones is very popular among young readers but I can't handle reading them out loud. (They're told in the highly ungrammatical voice of a kindergartener / first grader.) I saved those for Molly to read herself when she started reading, but some parents love them.
If anyone suggests Birchbark House as an alternative / addendum to the Little House books (it's about a Native American girl in approximately the same period) be aware that it includes quite possibly the most upsetting death scene I've seen in children's fiction. It's definitely a book for older children. It's a good book, mind you, but OMG.
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Date: 2008-10-01 05:10 am (UTC)(...um, here through friendsfriends, got intrigued by the conversation.)
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Date: 2008-10-01 05:33 am (UTC)(I'm using Amazon to see what's available.) Pippi Longstocking is absurd on a level I think toddlers appreciate. I never liked Karlsson on the roof, but it'd be age appropriate. She's probably too young for Ronia and The Brothers Lionheart. Lotta on Troublemaker Street would be great, and so would Simon Small Moves In, if you can find it.