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re: What are some great books to read to my 8 year old girl ?
Posted on 9/16/14 at 8:29 pm to LoveThatMoney
Posted on 9/16/14 at 8:29 pm to LoveThatMoney
quote:
His Dark Materials by Philip Pullman
this. get her cogs turning
Posted on 9/16/14 at 8:34 pm to Zilla
Mein Kampf got a 3/5 on goodreads
Posted on 9/16/14 at 9:22 pm to MrFreakinMiyagi
quote:
Bridge to Terabithia
Is a classic.
Same territory of Where the Red Fern Grows.
But those are all classics and don't need recommendations.
But like I posted earlier...Royal Road to Romance...will change her life. It's not as widely known being out of print for so long.
Posted on 9/16/14 at 9:29 pm to LoveThatMoney
quote:
Narnia
This and
quote:
The Redwall series by Brian Jacques
fantastic suggestion.
Posted on 9/16/14 at 9:55 pm to Sellecks Moustache
Madeleine L'engle books are great.
The Witch of Blackbird Pond
An old book called The Pushcart War
She also might like The Sisterhood of the Travelling Pants, but may still be a bit young for them.
The Witch of Blackbird Pond
An old book called The Pushcart War
She also might like The Sisterhood of the Travelling Pants, but may still be a bit young for them.
Posted on 9/16/14 at 9:57 pm to biglego
I like the discovery books and Encyclopedia Brown. Mystery stuff.
Posted on 9/16/14 at 10:49 pm to LoveThatMoney
quote:
The Redwall series by Brian Jacques.
Damn I forgot about these books. This is actually a really good suggestion. Martin the Warrior and Taggerung were probably my favorite
Posted on 9/17/14 at 4:26 am to Zilla
I would suggest a varied approach.
Classical Greek Myths
Aesop's Fables
Pippi Longstocking Series
Nancy Drew
Chronicles of Narnia
Wizard of Oz series
Wonder Woman comics and books
Potter series
Tolkien series
etc.
Classical Greek Myths
Aesop's Fables
Pippi Longstocking Series
Nancy Drew
Chronicles of Narnia
Wizard of Oz series
Wonder Woman comics and books
Potter series
Tolkien series
etc.
This post was edited on 9/17/14 at 4:28 am
Posted on 9/17/14 at 6:34 am to BigAppleTiger
Potter. My daughter is 11 now and that's about the age we started reading them. I would read her the first one every night and then she finished the series because she couldn't wait.
Posted on 9/17/14 at 8:44 am to TIGERSTORM
Island of the Blue Dolphins
Mrs Frisby and the Rats of NIMH
The Indian in the Cupboard
The Soup books (Soup, Soup and Me, Soup for President)
Mrs Frisby and the Rats of NIMH
The Indian in the Cupboard
The Soup books (Soup, Soup and Me, Soup for President)
Posted on 9/17/14 at 8:47 am to jchamil
quote:
The Indian in the Cupboard
F'in A.
Posted on 9/17/14 at 8:49 am to Zilla
Tikki Tikki Tembo
The Five Chinese Brothers
Sylvester and the Magic Pebble
The TRUE Story of the Three Little Pigs
The Five Chinese Brothers
Sylvester and the Magic Pebble
The TRUE Story of the Three Little Pigs
Posted on 9/17/14 at 10:02 am to Zilla
I read the hobbit to my boy when he was six and he loved it. Unless you have a long bed time it would take a long time. We did it over the summer when I could read to him for 30-40 minutes.
It was really rewarding though. Afterward make sure you write inside the book when you finished it. Everytime I open the Hobbit it's cool to see "Drexyl and drexyl's son read the hobbit together in the summer of 2012" I signed it and so did he in six year old cursive.
He's read the Narnia series, Indian in the cupboard, the jungle book, rikki tikki tavi,4 of the Harry potters (but those get kinda dark in the later books so we have him in hold with those). And a ton of others that are more current.
David and the Phoenix is a shorter chapter book and a cool story. We read that one during school and it wasn't as much of a nightly time commitment.
I have a little girl so i want to read her stuff with a female protagonist. I have no idea where to start though.
ETA How to eat Fried Worms (a true classic)
I just thought of a great one Peter and the Starcatchers. it's a really cool story and a different take on Peter Pan. Chapters are short so good for during the school year.
It was really rewarding though. Afterward make sure you write inside the book when you finished it. Everytime I open the Hobbit it's cool to see "Drexyl and drexyl's son read the hobbit together in the summer of 2012" I signed it and so did he in six year old cursive.
He's read the Narnia series, Indian in the cupboard, the jungle book, rikki tikki tavi,4 of the Harry potters (but those get kinda dark in the later books so we have him in hold with those). And a ton of others that are more current.
David and the Phoenix is a shorter chapter book and a cool story. We read that one during school and it wasn't as much of a nightly time commitment.
I have a little girl so i want to read her stuff with a female protagonist. I have no idea where to start though.
ETA How to eat Fried Worms (a true classic)
I just thought of a great one Peter and the Starcatchers. it's a really cool story and a different take on Peter Pan. Chapters are short so good for during the school year.
This post was edited on 9/17/14 at 10:10 am
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