Tag Archives: Kidlit

Young Advanced Readers: An Age Appropriate Book List for Puzzled Parents

Recently, a commenter mentioned that she was having trouble finding good books for her second grader, an advanced reader who enjoys Harry Potter, but is prone to having bad dreams from reading content that is developmentally inappropriate.

As usual, the answer lies largely in OLD BOOKS, which are comparatively more challenging than much of the modern fare aimed at younger readers. Most of these recommendations were written as series (I have marked these with an asterisk), so there are actually many more books on this list than first appears.

One great quality of advanced readers is that they are usually not book snobs. While they can comprehend and enjoy things written for older children, a book written for their peers can be fun, too, as long as the story is a good one. I have included both in this list.

Many of these titles can only be found at the library, but information about them is still available on Amazon.com. A few can also be found on Kindle, for free, from the Kindle Popular Classics list. To see summaries, reviews, and other books in each series, click on any title.

The Wizard of OzL. Frank Baum

The Story of Dr. Doolittle* Hugh Lofting

Rabbit Hill Robert Lawson

Aesop’s Fables

My Father’s Dragon* Ruth Stiles Gannett

The Adventures of Uncle Wiggley* Howard R. Garis

Harold and the Purple Crayon* Crocket Johnson

The X Bar X Boys* James Cody Ferris

Anything by E. Nesbit

Rikki Tikki Tavi Rudyard Kipling

The Wind in the Willows Kenneth Grahame

The Wolves of Willoughby Chase* Joan Aiken

Any children’s book by E.B. White

Encyclopedia Brown* Donald J. Sobol

The Happy Hollisters* Jerry West

Anything by Frances Hodgson Burnett

The Mad Scientist’s Club* Bertrand R. Brinley

Brighty of the Grand Canyon  Marguerite Henry

Homer Price* Robert McCloskey

The Wonderful Flight to the Mushroom Planet* Eleanor Cameron

Danny Dunn* Jay Williams

Swiss Family Robinson Johann David Wyss

Beautiful Joe Marshall Saunders

Black Beauty Anna Sewell

The Chronicles of Narnia* C.S. Lewis

Pippi Longstocking* Astrid Lindgren

The Borrowers* Mary Norton

The Mouse and the Motorcycle* Beverly Cleary

Dr. Seuss’s bigger books: Horton Hears a Who, Horton Hatches the Egg, Bartholomew and the Oobleck

The Children’s Hour 16 Volume Set Marjorie Barrows, editor
(Wonderful) 

The Fairy Books* Andrew Lang

Don’t make the mistake of thinking that you have to stick with fiction. Books such as The Boy Who Invented the Trampoline, about the history of various inventions, can be a source of interesting reading, as can biographies. There are many written for juvenile readers, and helping your children select people whose lives they might want to learn more about can be a lot of fun.

For more on this topic, see my previous post,“Considering Asynchronous Development in Book Selection.” (1/11/10)

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The Five Little Peppers and How They Grew Passé

The Five Little Peppers and How They Grew, by Margaret Sydney, was a book that I read in fourth grade, while visiting my grandparents in Florida at Christmastime. I remember loving it because the story was so homey and old fashioned, the characters engaging, with their light escapades and cheerful family life. The pure and good Polly Pepper, her brothers Ben, Joel and Davie, little sister Phronsie, and their poor widowed mother. Although they went through trying times, they were a happy and grateful family.

After I discovered my Kindle capabilities last week (see my recent blog post: Virtually Unlimited), I skimmed the Kindle Store’s Popular Classics (pre-1923, free because they are no longer under copyright). When I saw The Five Little Peppers, I pushed the button and it became mine once again.

Re-reading the book as an adult, The Five Little Peppers still holds some of its early charms, but I was surprised at how archaic the writing style was. I don’t recall that from when I was little. I also noticed how Doctor Fisher (a grown man) “skipped” and “pranced about” when agitated, which I guess I vaguely remember, but at the time recognized that it was from an earlier, more innocent era, and it didn’t bother me.

When children read, they don’t have many of the preconceived notions that adults do. Children are more elastic in their view of the world and tend to take things as they come. They have not developed fixed expectations or become jaded, and care more about story than style. A book is what it is, and they will read without question. More fluid in their understanding than adults, kids find it relatively easy to shift their thinking to accommodate an old fashioned writing style. 

When they read stories about the past, children assume that the settings and details are factual, whether reading fiction or non-fiction. They accept that things and people were different then. Values and ways of behaving in society weren’t the same either, with modesty, honesty and character being stressed rather than the independence, edginess and frequently antisocial behavior of today. Many characters from earlier time periods were written as examples of virtue, an ideal to aspire to, rather than someone readers would see themselves in. 

Today I did some research on The Five Little Peppers series, and discovered that it was written from 1881 – 1916. The Five Little Peppers books were so popular that when the author finally completed her six book series, readers overwhelmed her with letters begging for more, and she wrote several additional books of background and side stories to keep her fans happy.

Our modern society values the new and disposable, getting rid of old books at library sales and replacing them with recent paperbacks and commercial fiction. One wonders these days, in an era of road rage, depression and isolation due to technological “advances,” if they didn’t have the right idea back then.

The six books in the original series, Five Little Peppers and How They GrewFive Little Peppers MidwayFive Little Peppers AbroadFive Little Peppers and Their FriendsFive Little Peppers Grown Up and Five Little Peppers: Phronsie Pepper can all be found and downloaded for free at the Kindle Store (Popular Classics) and Gutenberg.org

For more information on The Five Little Peppers, go to: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Five_Little_Peppers

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