19,790 posts
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Post by BurlyBeaR on Jan 22, 2018 20:41:08 GMT
One of my favourite Fives of all time was Five Go On A Hike Together. “Two trees, gloomy water, Saucy Jane and Maggie knows”. I can see the cover of that paperback with them all peering over the edge of a raft as clear as day right now.
I think the cover art made a huge impression on me back then. I went on to collect Tom Adams cover art from Agatha Christie novels.
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Post by Deleted on Jan 22, 2018 21:29:22 GMT
One of my favourite Fives of all time was Five Go On A Hike Together. “Two trees, gloomy water, Saucy Jane and Maggie knows”. Wasn't that the one where they had to find a spot in the middle of a lake by matching up nearby landscape features? I always loved that.
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Post by Deleted on Jan 23, 2018 4:10:39 GMT
One of my favourites is "The Little Prince". I recently bought a special edition at Livraria Lello in Porto, Portugal. One of the most beautiful bookshops I've ever visited.
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239 posts
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Post by dizzieblonde on Jan 23, 2018 11:53:22 GMT
I was such a bookworm as a child - I went through piles of books a week. It's incredibly difficult to condense that into a shortlist, but I'd have to say:
Little House on the Prairie, and the sequels Noel Streatfeild's Ballet Shoes books The Wind In The Willows The Secret Garden The Little Princess Little Women The Railway Children Enid Blyton - all of them, but I was obsessed with the St Clare's books!
When I was younger, I loved the Little Grey Rabbit books, by Alison Uttley. I honestly don't know if they're even in print any more. Talking to people, I recently realised just what a fantastic primary school experience I had, with a large, well stocked library (for a very small school), and teachers who read aloud to the class almost every single afternoon. I distinctly remember being 7 years old, and having the entire book of The Hobbit read to us, in daily installments, over a long period of time (although it was perhaps just a few weeks, maybe a month). Do teachers even do that any more - and would they tackle a fairly advanced reader book, for a crowd of 7 year olds, that would take weeks to complete?
I also remember one teacher reading us The Demon Headmaster - he took inordinate pleasure reading us the descriptions of the things that happened to the children, and so the book scared me sh*tless for weeks afterwards! I have a bunch of nephews and nieces, in the age range of when I started to become book obsessed, and their Xmas and birthday presents are now heavily book-related. I'm determined that they'll get the opportunity to have same experience I did, so I'm making sure they get all the ones I loved, as well as the usual Roald Dahl, Harry Potter stuff that every kid loves!
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409 posts
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Post by maggiem on Jan 23, 2018 17:14:32 GMT
Anyone mentioned Roald Dahl?
Charlie & the Chocolate Factory, Charlie and the Great Glass Elevator, Fantastic Mr Fox, James and the Giant Peach ... can't beat 'em.
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4,361 posts
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Post by shady23 on Jan 23, 2018 18:33:49 GMT
I loved the Secret Seven as a child and wasn't a fan of the Famous Five. Re-reading them now it's the other way around. The Secret Seven really are the most frightful bunch. Snobby, rude and pompous!
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196 posts
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Post by rockinrobin on Jan 24, 2018 21:29:53 GMT
Mary Poppins! I still love these books. My father gave me a wonderful, beautiful, shiny new edition of all stories in one volume a few years ago - it was my 34th birthday... One of the best gifts ever, if not the best.
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4,361 posts
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Post by shady23 on Jan 24, 2018 21:43:57 GMT
shady23, you are Susie and I claim my £5. Let me in that shed and to the endless ginger beer and cook's finest rock buns and fruit cake, God damm it! 😂
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13 posts
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Post by jasmineneroli on Jan 25, 2018 20:04:56 GMT
The Enchanted Wood, The Faraway Tree and The Wishing Chair
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1,250 posts
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Post by joem on Jan 25, 2018 20:11:33 GMT
Someone mentioned Malcolm Saville? I found it interesting (in the Lone Pine series) how he had a group of linked characters, family and friends, who did not necessarily appear in all the books but were still main characters in the series as a whole.
Also, how he handled relationships as the kids grew to be young adults. Rather more tastefully, I seem to remember, than JK Rowling's obsession with "snogging" in the later Harry Potter novels.
Doesn't seem to have done him much good in terms of enduring popularity though.
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2,339 posts
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Post by theglenbucklaird on Jan 25, 2018 20:13:35 GMT
The Hungry Caterpillar
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171 posts
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Post by musicalfloozie on Jan 25, 2018 20:17:23 GMT
I absolutely loved reading The Caravan Family by Enid Blyton and ever since had wanted to live or holiday in a gypsy style caravan, although now I'm older have decided holiday would be better as no way could all my junk fit in a caravan! I also loved the My Naughty Little Sister books, we even had them on record read by Felicity Kendal. I've scoured the internet looking for recordings of that but can't find anywhere.
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Post by Deleted on Jan 25, 2018 21:12:35 GMT
I loved My Naughty Little Sister too. Mrs Cocoa Jones... Everyone keeps mentioning Malcolm Saville. I've never read any, but my mum has loads of them in her bedroom from her childhood. Shall I try them then?
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