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Classics of children’s literature?

I am tutoring a bunch of kids from 10-18 years old. I wondered what you would recommend as terrific works for kids. For example, I have done books like Harriet the Spy, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, and A Christmas Carol. I would love hear your suggestions.

by Anonymousreply 137June 21, 2025 1:53 PM

The Anne of Green Gables and Emily of New Moon series by L. M. Montgomery. Really, any book by her. Good for the whole age range.

I can think of loads more but those were the first that sprang to mind.

by Anonymousreply 1June 20, 2025 1:29 AM

The Little Prince

by Anonymousreply 2June 20, 2025 1:31 AM

Lord of the Flies

Never Cry Wolf

by Anonymousreply 3June 20, 2025 1:32 AM

The Secret Garden

by Anonymousreply 4June 20, 2025 1:33 AM

The Witches or Matilda, Stuart Little, Shiloh, Where The Red Fern Grows.

by Anonymousreply 5June 20, 2025 1:34 AM

The Phantom Tollbooth.

by Anonymousreply 6June 20, 2025 1:36 AM

Little Women

by Anonymousreply 7June 20, 2025 1:37 AM

Do NOT scar those poor little kids with Where the Red Fern Grows (though it's a good book.)

by Anonymousreply 8June 20, 2025 1:37 AM

The Outsiders

by Anonymousreply 9June 20, 2025 1:37 AM

Fifty Shades of Gray

by Anonymousreply 10June 20, 2025 1:38 AM

Chronicles of Narnia (I know it is a Christian allegory, but if you don't point it out I feel like kids don't really see it - or at least I didn't).

Wrinkle in Time Series

White Fang

by Anonymousreply 11June 20, 2025 1:40 AM

Charlotte’s Web

The Railway Children

A Wrinkle in Time (note, I hated it)

For older kids: Eva by Peter Dickinson. He wrote several YA books and all are worth reading.

by Anonymousreply 12June 20, 2025 1:45 AM

Bambi

Kon-Tiki

by Anonymousreply 13June 20, 2025 1:45 AM

Kidnapped

The Guns of Navarone is a surprisingly easy read

by Anonymousreply 14June 20, 2025 1:46 AM

Some of these skew toward the older teens, some are more appropriate for the younger ones, but would still be enjoyable reads.

Harper Lee: To Kill a Mockingbird

Stephen Crane: The Red Badge of Courage

SE Hinton: The Outsiders

Lois Lowry: The Giver

Norton Juster: The Phantom Tollbooth

Ursula K LeGuin: The Earthsea Trilogy

Madeleine L'Engle: A Wrinkle in Time

Roald Dahl: Charlie and the Chocolate Factory

JRR Tolkien: The Hobbit

JD Salinger: The Catcher in the Rye

Nicola Yoon: Everything, Everything

Markus Zusak: The Book Thief

by Anonymousreply 15June 20, 2025 1:52 AM

Joan Aiken, The Wolves of Willoughby Chase, and then afterwards, the sequel Black Hearts in Battersea

by Anonymousreply 16June 20, 2025 2:04 AM

I Once Had a Master, by John Preston

by Anonymousreply 17June 20, 2025 2:05 AM

"The Diamond in the Window" by Jane Langton

by Anonymousreply 18June 20, 2025 2:07 AM

True Grit, by Charles Portis, is a great book. (More people know the movie versions. I think it'ws better.) Not a kids' book but kids can enjoy it.

For readers who are around 12 or 13, an oldie but goodie, Johnny Tremain.

The Outsiders is great, but other S. E. Hinton books that are better in some ways: Tex, That was Then This is Now, Rumble Fish.

by Anonymousreply 19June 20, 2025 2:25 AM

13 Reasons Why.

by Anonymousreply 20June 20, 2025 2:26 AM

Second for "Diamond in the Window".

by Anonymousreply 21June 20, 2025 2:26 AM

Bridge to Terrabithia by Katherine Paterson

Nine Stories by JD Salinger

I second The Phantom Tollbooth!

by Anonymousreply 22June 20, 2025 2:32 AM

Spare

by Anonymousreply 23June 20, 2025 2:38 AM

[quote] Nine Stories by JD Salinger

I'm sure the 10 year old will just love the endings of "A Perfect Day for Bananafish"!

by Anonymousreply 24June 20, 2025 3:03 AM

I was a big fan of the Ramona Quimby series as a kid. It seemed especially close to home because I also grew up in the Portland area and was familiar with the neighborhood she lived in. I still think they are great books. Beverly Cleary managed to capture an emotional intelligence in them that you don't always find in children's literature. I plan on buying one of the complete sets to give to my niece.

by Anonymousreply 25June 20, 2025 3:11 AM

NOT Nine Stories for god’s sake.

by Anonymousreply 26June 20, 2025 3:21 AM

Encyclopedia Brown

by Anonymousreply 27June 20, 2025 3:34 AM

I was a fan of The Boxcar Children

by Anonymousreply 28June 20, 2025 3:44 AM

Wifey

by Anonymousreply 29June 20, 2025 3:45 AM

Hatchet, the first book I bought just for the cover

Offsite Link
by Anonymousreply 30June 20, 2025 4:01 AM

Any book by Jason Reynolds.

by Anonymousreply 31June 20, 2025 4:02 AM

I second Johnny Tremain. I had the same teacher in the fifth and sixth grade and we nagged her to read it again when we got to the 6th grade.

by Anonymousreply 32June 20, 2025 4:12 AM

The Westing Game! Great murder mystery written for kids.

by Anonymousreply 33June 20, 2025 4:16 AM

I don't know why, but as a kid growing up on the west coast, I was very taken with colonial-era children's literature. "The Witch of Blackbird Pond" and "Indian Captive: The Story of Mary Jemison" were obsessions of mine that I would check out from the school library again and again. Classics? I don't know. Perhaps only to me.

by Anonymousreply 34June 20, 2025 4:19 AM

The Native American in the Cupboard Series

by Anonymousreply 35June 20, 2025 4:23 AM

For the younger kids,

Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of N.I.H.M.

A Cricket in Times Square

Island of the Blue Dolphins

Older kids:

Watership Down

The Last Unicorn

Flowers for Algernon

by Anonymousreply 36June 20, 2025 4:29 AM

Damn, every book I thought of has already been mentioned.

I’m gonna add any horse books by Marguerite Henry with illustrations by Wesley Dennis. She’s best known for Misty of Chincoteague but wrote many other books.

There are bound to be some kids who love horses in that group.

by Anonymousreply 37June 20, 2025 4:30 AM

Ahhh how could I forget Charlotte's Web?

by Anonymousreply 38June 20, 2025 4:30 AM

Great choice r37

by Anonymousreply 39June 20, 2025 5:25 AM

There was a French author of children's books, Hector Malot. He wrote a book entitled "en famille" which was translated into English as "the Adventures of Perrine". A very good book for perhaps 6th grade to 8th grade kids. There are adult themes - the death of a parent, rejection on account of mixed-race, etc, but the interesting settings in Paris of the 19th century and then in a factory town of Normandy are vivid and engaging and Perrine is a very intelligent heroine. It is sometimes titled "Nobody's girl", and it's available that way on project Gutenberg.

He wrote a companion book "sans famille" - nobody's boy - which apparently is very popular in France, but I've never read it.

Offsite Link
by Anonymousreply 40June 20, 2025 7:50 AM

we read trash novels and biographies in Junior HS and learned a lot.

by Anonymousreply 41June 20, 2025 9:38 AM

In addition to the already stated Wrinkle in Time series and Chronicles of Narnia (which are both Christian allegories) I’d add the Great Brain series by John Dennis Fitzgerald.

by Anonymousreply 42June 20, 2025 9:46 AM

Oh and how has no one mentioned Judy Blume?

Tales of a fourth grade nothing

by Anonymousreply 43June 20, 2025 9:50 AM

My favorite book when I was in middle school.

I’m still pissed there wasn’t a sequel.

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by Anonymousreply 44June 20, 2025 10:10 AM

The Cat Ate My Gymsuit

by Anonymousreply 45June 20, 2025 10:11 AM

I loved the Great Brain series.

The Little House series

Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle

The Borrowers

The Wind In The Willows

Sideways Stories From Wayside School

Paddington Bear

by Anonymousreply 46June 20, 2025 10:16 AM

Le Guin is great for the older teens.

by Anonymousreply 47June 20, 2025 10:30 AM

I read Nine Stories at 12 and enjoyed them. OP says some of his students are 18.

by Anonymousreply 48June 20, 2025 10:32 AM

For the younger kids, The Mysterious Disappearance of Leon (I Mean Noel) by Ellen Raskin.

by Anonymousreply 49June 20, 2025 10:34 AM

The lion the witch and the wardrobe.

by Anonymousreply 50June 20, 2025 10:39 AM

The Bell Jar.

by Anonymousreply 51June 20, 2025 11:01 AM

Rudyard Kipling’s Kim

The Witch of Blackbird Pond, a Newbery Award winner

A High Wind in Jamaica, children kidnapped by pirates might be too disturbing

by Anonymousreply 52June 20, 2025 11:18 AM

Jane Eyre and The Diary of Anne Franke. I had to read them in English class in the 8th grade and subsequently read them both several times over the years.

by Anonymousreply 53June 20, 2025 11:24 AM

The Baron in the Trees

Tide in the Attic

All Aboard for Freedom

Banner in the Sky

Across Five APrils (Irene Hunt)

by Anonymousreply 54June 20, 2025 11:28 AM

I'm going back to the late 70s, but when I was 14 years old, we had a summer reading list in our high school before entering Freshman year and we had to read 4 books. (I went to a public school which was a college-prep school since the 1800s).

I recently came across my summer reading list last week (cleaning out some old stuff and came across my yearbook), and the four books we all had to read the summer of 1977 were:

To Kill A Mockingbird

A Tree Grows in Brooklyn

Life With Father

Mary Shelley's Frankenstein

(At 14 years old, I remember I didn't finish 'Frankenstein' because I found it rather boring...but the other three I really enjoyed).

by Anonymousreply 55June 20, 2025 11:47 AM

After watching Sam Claflin play Edmond Dantes in the 2024 The Count of Monte Cristo series, I bought a copy of the children's version of the book, which I probably read at age ten. It's a story about being done wrong in the worst possible way, then getting to take revenge on those who wronged you. I've read lots of different versions, from Classics Illustrated comic books to a 1,000+ page translation, and smaller books in between. I'm enjoying it again.

by Anonymousreply 56June 20, 2025 12:01 PM

When I worked at the local library a few years ago, the Harry Potter Series was hugely popular for children and teens for summer reading. Believe it or not, that series started over 25 years ago.

by Anonymousreply 57June 20, 2025 12:07 PM

R55 is from Boston or Cambridge.

Just a guess…

by Anonymousreply 58June 20, 2025 12:09 PM

"The Man Who Planted Trees," by Jean Giono. A lovely, gentle book suitable for children, to teach them what ingenuity and perseverance is capable of accomplishing.

The series of "Twins" books, by Lucy Fitch Perkins. These stories were a favorite of my husband, who grew up reading them in the 40's and 50's(they were originally published in the teens and 20's) They ARE rather dated now, and very much of their time, but still worthy of being read. Each story concerns a different set of twins, always a boy and girl, who grew up in different eras and various countries and situations. I find them very relaxing reading. Lovely pen and ink illustrations accompany the text.

by Anonymousreply 59June 20, 2025 12:33 PM

We passed around a scandalous paperbacks, such as Going Down with Janis - a biography of Janis Joplin that was chock full of muff diving, drugs, parties, rock and roll. Everything. The 70s. We loved that book. Jacqueline Susann trash novels. That sort of thing.

by Anonymousreply 60June 20, 2025 1:39 PM

E Nesbit'snovels, especially the more fantastic ones (The Phoenix and the Carpet, Five Children and It). Gore Vidal wrote a wonderful appreciative essay about them

by Anonymousreply 61June 20, 2025 1:47 PM

The original Pippi Longstockings books

by Anonymousreply 62June 20, 2025 1:50 PM

Oh, my GOD! Please don't go down the Pete the Cat or Captain Underpants rathole. That's ALL they will want to fixate on -at least the younger ones, who probably need the most instruction. Literacy teacher here. EXHAUSTED from students wanting to read Captain Underpants. (They get to choose a book to be read aloud for about 10 minutes before each lesson begins. I've been over-riding them and telling them those two are not options right now. They need a rest.)

by Anonymousreply 63June 20, 2025 1:53 PM

R25 The Beverly Cleary books made me love to read and sparked my interest in writing. When I was in the 4th grade, I wrote a fan letter to Beverly Cleary. She wrote back to me, and for the next nine years, we had an ongoing pen pal friendship.

I still have all the handwritten letters she sent me.

by Anonymousreply 64June 20, 2025 1:54 PM

A ten year old would read a book with Underpants in the title? Have we devolved to that level?

read this when I was ten…

Offsite Link
by Anonymousreply 65June 20, 2025 1:56 PM

R64 There’s a dorm at Berkeley named for her. She had a hardscrabble life…rough road to make it to college and succeed as a writer

Offsite Link
by Anonymousreply 66June 20, 2025 1:59 PM

That is so cool, R64. I loved her books as a child.

by Anonymousreply 67June 20, 2025 2:00 PM

R67 And when I was 12, she came to my town for a speaking engagement. My mom took me to it, and when Beverly Cleary got up to start her lecture, she first said she wanted to say hello to a "very special friend" and called out my name and asked me to stand up.

It was one of my best childhood memories.

by Anonymousreply 68June 20, 2025 2:02 PM

🤙🏼

by Anonymousreply 69June 20, 2025 2:03 PM

Aww, I like Pete the Cat and his groovy buttons but then I’m reading it to a 3 year old.

by Anonymousreply 70June 20, 2025 2:05 PM

R36, I too love A Cricket in Times Square. Several years ago I re-read the last few chapters of the book (was curious if it was as good as I remembered) and it STILL made me smile and get teary-eyed... incredible. My paperback is very old and yellowed... don't think it's long for this world unfortunately.

I really should try A Tree Grows in Brooklyn...

by Anonymousreply 71June 20, 2025 2:15 PM

Who remembers Cricket magazine, for literary-minded children of the 70s? It was required reading for “high readers” and “gifted children” in my school district.

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by Anonymousreply 72June 20, 2025 2:19 PM

I remember thinking that “A Tree Grows in Brooklyn” had more adult themes than I expected it to when I read it.

by Anonymousreply 73June 20, 2025 2:19 PM

My dad was the living -SoCal suburban- version of Johnny Nolan. I can’t watch the film version without crying.

by Anonymousreply 74June 20, 2025 2:23 PM

I think the same author wrote, "The Genie of Sutton Place" which was a good read as well. I should read Cricket again- glad to hear that it didn't lose its magic.

by Anonymousreply 75June 20, 2025 2:24 PM

[quote]Literacy teacher here. EXHAUSTED from students wanting to read Captain Underpants.

By Max Emerson?

by Anonymousreply 76June 20, 2025 2:24 PM

That was for r21

by Anonymousreply 77June 20, 2025 2:25 PM

A Tree…

Offsite Link
by Anonymousreply 78June 20, 2025 2:34 PM

I Am the Cheese - that will fuck up any kid.

by Anonymousreply 79June 20, 2025 2:42 PM

Island of the Blue Dolphins. A beautifully written book that really touched and inspired me when I was young. I have never forgotten it.

Also the Wrinkle in Time trilogy, by Madeleine L’Engle.

by Anonymousreply 80June 20, 2025 2:44 PM

I wonder if many of the "hard hitting" ones from my teenage years would seem impossibly dated now to middle school and high school students: I am the Cheese, the Chocolate War, A Separate Peace...

by Anonymousreply 81June 20, 2025 4:10 PM

…you left out A Hard Man is Good to Find.

It was very illuminating in 6th grade.

by Anonymousreply 82June 20, 2025 4:13 PM

For the older kids: The Lord of the Rings by J.R.R. Tolkien. I read the trilogy when I was 12 and it got me hooked on reading from then on...

by Anonymousreply 83June 20, 2025 4:26 PM

No love for Babar?

by Anonymousreply 84June 20, 2025 4:29 PM

We are talking about 10 year olds, not 4 year olds…

by Anonymousreply 85June 20, 2025 4:36 PM

Are you there, Sara Lee? It's Me, Chrissy.

by Anonymousreply 86June 20, 2025 5:19 PM

Evert—

Closet bulemic

by Anonymousreply 87June 20, 2025 5:23 PM

A Wrinkle in Time

The Diary of Anne Frank

Cheaper by the Dozen

by Anonymousreply 88June 20, 2025 5:39 PM

Portnoy's Complaint

by Anonymousreply 89June 20, 2025 5:40 PM

Fun fact: mother Gilbreth-Cheaper by the Dozen- went to Berkeley a few years ahead of Beverly Cleary.

by Anonymousreply 90June 20, 2025 5:42 PM

[quote]The series of "Twins" books, by Lucy Fitch Perkins.

Ohmygawd, yes! My sister and I are in our early sixties and we read them all!

by Anonymousreply 91June 20, 2025 5:43 PM

You mean lesbian… I hope?!

Grammarian

by Anonymousreply 92June 20, 2025 5:47 PM

Transport-7-41-R

I am certain this is out of print and would NEVER be recommended for a sixth-grader these days, but I devoured it when my elementary school librarian handed it to me at age twelve. The characters and images have stayed with me for nearly fifty years!

Here's the summary:

It is 1946. Alone on a crowded transport train, a 13-year-old girl must travel from her childhood in now-defeated Nazi Germany toward an uncertain future in Cologne. Her main companions are an elderly couple. The wife is wheelchair bound and during the trip, she dies and they transport her corpse into the American zone pretending she is still alive!

Hardly "Make Way for Ducklings", huh?

by Anonymousreply 93June 20, 2025 5:57 PM

Sounds too European.

by Anonymousreply 94June 20, 2025 6:00 PM

R72 I loved it! The cover and illustrations were wonderful.

I second A Cricket in Times Square.

Also, for those kids who like a little magic and terror, The Figure in the Shadows by John Bellair. Still freaks me out to this day!

Also, After the First Death by Robert Cormier. It’s very dark but good.

by Anonymousreply 95June 20, 2025 6:01 PM

Bambi

by Anonymousreply 96June 20, 2025 6:02 PM

Holes by Louis Sachar

by Anonymousreply 97June 20, 2025 6:17 PM

The Bobbsey Twins

by Anonymousreply 98June 20, 2025 6:21 PM

The author of Cricket (and the others) wrote a great very adult gay novel, “The Story of Harold,” under the name Terry Andrews—it features a writer who gets into SM with a much younger man. Difficult to find, but worth interlibrary loan!

I’d add Noel Streatfeild’s Shoes books, Elizabeth Enright’s Melendez family books, Lloyd Alexander’s Persian Chronucles, Susan Cooper’s The Dark is Rising series, anything by Eleanor Estes (the Mondays books and The Witch Family are my favorites), E.L. Konigsberg, and Zilpha Keatley Snyder.

by Anonymousreply 99June 20, 2025 6:47 PM

Robert Cormier was incapable of positive endings. The bad guys always won.

Too real for right now.

by Anonymousreply 100June 20, 2025 7:38 PM

For the 10 year olds Susan Cooper's The Dark is Rising series (vaguely magical but not Harry Potter level). For the 18 year olds Colette's Sido and My Mother's House (which has been published in one volume). Colette writes so well of how she physically experienced her world that anyone can join her in it.

by Anonymousreply 101June 20, 2025 8:29 PM

The original Laura Ingalls Wilder books. Not the dumb show or that quack Roger Lea Macbride’s sequels. I liked the classic Hans Christian Anderson stories although some like The Snow Queen are a little scary. In the 60s I was still reading old books they still carried a lot of in school libraries. The Beany Malone series by Lenore Mattingly Weber that started in WWll, horse books by Elisa Bialk, C.W. Anderson, old teen romance authors like Betty Cavana, Rosamund Du Jardin, Anne Emory, mysteries by Phyllis A. Whitney, kid collections from Alfred Hitchcock…I remember when Harriet The Spy, Henry 3, and Up A Road Slowly came out and I was asked to read them. I’m old.

by Anonymousreply 102June 20, 2025 8:44 PM

For older teens, Lev Grossman’s Magicians Trilogy.

by Anonymousreply 103June 20, 2025 8:52 PM

The Cat Ate My Gymsuit by Paula Danziger.

by Anonymousreply 104June 20, 2025 9:01 PM

[quote][R55] is from Boston or Cambridge. Just a guess…

Guessed wrong. I'm from Providence, RI.

by Anonymousreply 105June 20, 2025 9:34 PM

Close enough—NE “classical” public school and all.

by Anonymousreply 106June 20, 2025 9:38 PM

My Side of the Mountain by Jean Craighead George

Meet Me in St. Louis by Sally Benson

A Ring of Endess Light by Madeleine L'Engle

Because of Winn-Dixie by Kate DiCmillo

Old Yeller by Fred Gipson

Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry by Mildred D. Taylor

by Anonymousreply 107June 20, 2025 10:23 PM

Dont expect anyone under 25 to appreciate Salinger R22.

by Anonymousreply 108June 20, 2025 10:47 PM

From the Mixed Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler

Freddy the Pig books

The Trumpeter of Krakow

ELizabeth Enright's Melendey Family books

by Anonymousreply 109June 20, 2025 10:52 PM

Is Harry Potter considered a classic now? Lord of the rings series. Call of the wild.

by Anonymousreply 110June 20, 2025 10:52 PM

Trans kids love it! So I’ve heard

by Anonymousreply 111June 20, 2025 10:54 PM

When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit- Judith Kerr.

by Anonymousreply 112June 20, 2025 11:15 PM

Rudyard Kipling's "The Jungle Book" and, for younger children, his "Just So" stories.

John Ruskin's "The King of the Golden River," which is a short story, but still good.

Ernest Thompson Seton's animal and nature stories. Technically, they are for adults, but I loved them when I was a kid. They don't often end happily, so take that into account.

:"A Little Princess" although it ends much differently than in the movies .

:

by Anonymousreply 113June 20, 2025 11:29 PM

Five on a Treasure Island

The Magic Faraway Tree

Adventures of the Wishing-Chair

by Anonymousreply 114June 20, 2025 11:43 PM

[quote]When I worked at the local library a few years ago, the Harry Potter Series was hugely popular for children and teens for summer reading

[quote]Is Harry Potter considered a classic now?

I don't know that I would consider them classics. Not only are they not old enough, but they range from a 5 to maybe 8 on a 1-10 scale. They aren't bad (the later ones can be quite good), but they aren't comparable to many of the books being listed.

Plus, I would bet 80% of kids have already read them.

by Anonymousreply 115June 20, 2025 11:47 PM

Alice in Wonderland

by Anonymousreply 116June 20, 2025 11:50 PM

[quote]Alice in Wonderland

Really, r116?

Offsite Link
by Anonymousreply 117June 21, 2025 12:19 AM

Flowers in the Attic

by Anonymousreply 118June 21, 2025 1:53 AM

R96, I read Bambi several times as a child. Every child should read it. Every adult for that matter.

by Anonymousreply 119June 21, 2025 2:45 AM

R119. I agree. I was assigned to write about it for a reference book on children’s literature and had only seen the movie as a child. It really is a wonderful novel—the author also wrote “Perri” about a squirrel which Disney made into a live action film. The Disney cartoon of “Bambi” has its pleasures (and terrors), but the novel is really a serious piece of nature writing.

by Anonymousreply 120June 21, 2025 3:02 AM

“Strange Sisters”

by Anonymousreply 121June 21, 2025 3:08 AM

Same here r102, Betty Cavana, Rosamund Du Jardin, Anne Emory. A few years ago I was seeking them out to reread. I think Emory held up the best.

OP: Sherlock Holmes

by Anonymousreply 122June 21, 2025 3:34 AM

You can find them free on Open Library^^

by Anonymousreply 123June 21, 2025 3:38 AM

The Ghost Belonged to Me, Danny, Champion of the World, The Mouse and his child.

by Anonymousreply 124June 21, 2025 3:48 AM

In the 8th grade I did a comparison and contrast essay on Charlotte’s Web and Bambi. My teacher thought I was “slow” after that. I didn’t know what to think after that. She was the ugliest woman I’d ever seen and she was stuck on sci fi and Buckminster Fuller. I still think about that.

by Anonymousreply 125June 21, 2025 4:31 AM

r125, I hope you pissed on her grave.

by Anonymousreply 126June 21, 2025 5:20 AM

Richard Peck had some good books. I really liked the Blossom Culp books.

by Anonymousreply 127June 21, 2025 5:28 AM

Damn she was ugly. Huge JimmyDurante nose flecked with blackheads. Black straggly hair. I didn’t know whether to feel sorry for her or resentful because I didn’t dig Stranger In A Strange Land.

by Anonymousreply 128June 21, 2025 5:37 AM

She was expecting a lot from an 8th grader.

by Anonymousreply 129June 21, 2025 5:40 AM

R128 Who are you referencing?

by Anonymousreply 130June 21, 2025 6:00 AM

His teacher

by Anonymousreply 131June 21, 2025 7:22 AM

A book I enjoyed in middle School, All My Patients Are Under the Bed, by Dr. Louis J. Camuti, A vet who tended to Talula Bankhead's pussy

by Anonymousreply 132June 21, 2025 11:53 AM

Tallulah

by Anonymousreply 133June 21, 2025 11:57 AM

Tatahulu

by Anonymousreply 134June 21, 2025 12:07 PM

I’ve read that book, R132. I would have liked it as a child.

by Anonymousreply 135June 21, 2025 12:47 PM

The Haunting of Hill House. I read it as a child (more than once) and it sure kept me reading!

by Anonymousreply 136June 21, 2025 12:49 PM

Jade by Sally Watkins

by Anonymousreply 137June 21, 2025 1:53 PM
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