Is there a book from your childhood that stands out?

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cherrera
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Re: Is there a book from your childhood that stands out?

Post by cherrera »

E.G. Burroughs, John Carter series. I started when I was nine and finished up with the series around 13. A couple of years ago I ran across Princess of Mars online and re-read it. The imagery is still just as striking as it was then.
Moogle
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Post by Moogle »

I read Junie B. Jones when I was a baby!!!!!
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Mel Carriere
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Post by Mel Carriere »

Where the Red Fern Grows by Wilson Rawls. I read this book several times and I had to hide when I read it because the ending made me cry. I tried to chop down a tree after reading this book (the book's readers will understand), and my Mom stopped me. It was made into a rather campy movie that does not stir the imagination like the book does.
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Connie_88
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Post by Connie_88 »

Probably the Harry Potter series. I started reading them when the first one came out when I was 8 and carried on all the way through until the last one came out when I was 18.

I read the last one in a day because I was so desperate to find out who died and by the time I got to the end I was in floods - bye, bye childhood!
Reading makes immigrants of us all. It takes us away from home, but more important, it finds homes for us everywhere ~ Jean Rhys
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Mel Carriere
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Post by Mel Carriere »

My second childhood was spent reading the Harry Potter series as well, which I confiscated from my son when he was about eight years old to see what the hubub was all about, and then couldn't put it down.
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Hoilett
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Post by Hoilett »

Yes there are a couple.....One was "In Tune With Wedding Bells" by Grace Livingston. Reading it as a young teenager it affected me emotionally. It is the story of a young man who becomes the protector of a young woman who if I recall correctly had an accident. It was nicely written. I am not sure how I would react to it now....but then it was one I re-read a few times.
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Carla Hurst-Chandler
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Post by Carla Hurst-Chandler »

The Little House Books
“The real cycle you're working on is a cycle called yourself.”
― Robert M. Pirsig, Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance
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TimeKeeperApprentice
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Post by TimeKeeperApprentice »

Technically, I'm still in my childhood. So, The Last Apprentice series by Joseph Delaney is far the best books I've ever read.
Potter Fan Forever
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Bighuey
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Post by Bighuey »

Another bunch for me were the OZ books. I read just about all of them when I was a kid.
"I planted some birdseed. A bird came up. Now I dont know what to feed it." Ramblings of a retired senile mind.
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primrose777
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Post by primrose777 »

I may be showing my age but my favourite books from chidhood were the Enid Blighton books "The Enchanted Wood, "The Magic Far Away Tree", later "The Wishing Chair' and of course "The Twins of St Clairs" and the " Naughtiest girl in School". Loved them all, read them all many, many times. Happy days.
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Jazminsdaddy
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Post by Jazminsdaddy »

Choose Your Own Adventure books
Lloyd Alexander
Robert Aspirin's Myth Series
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Auggie
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Post by Auggie »

There are many, but I'll put a few out there.

Negative Impact: "The Iron Dragon's Daughter". I can't remember how I got a hold of this book, but I was WAY too young to read it. It was one of those 'train wreck' books that you just can't put down despite how much you want to. I was tremendously traumatized.

Positive Impact: "East Wind West Wind" and "The Good Earth" were two books that really stuck with me growing up. They opened me up to an interesting world of mixed culture and change.
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RuqeeD
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Post by RuqeeD »

One that I've just remembered is Jermiah in the Dark Woods. Which is a mixture of a lot of fairy tales in a modern setting....the big bad wolf on a motorbike....uhm that's all I remember really :lol: but I do remember the main character's name, it always stuck with me - Jermiah Obadiah Jackenory Jones.
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Bighuey
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Post by Bighuey »

cherrera wrote:E.G. Burroughs, John Carter series. I started when I was nine and finished up with the series around 13. A couple of years ago I ran across Princess of Mars online and re-read it. The imagery is still just as striking as it was then.
@ cherrera, if you are interested I just saw a trailer from a John Carter movie that is coming out. I would like to see it, just to see if they screw it up as bad as the Tarzan books into movies.
"I planted some birdseed. A bird came up. Now I dont know what to feed it." Ramblings of a retired senile mind.
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AlysonofBathe
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Post by AlysonofBathe »

Aside from the always popular HP series, I was enamored with Kit Pearson's Guests of War Trilogy.
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