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Thursday, 6 October 2011

Modern Classics

Suggestions via Twitter users on modern classics that you might have read, but really should if you haven't. (Apologies to those I haven't credited.) All suggestions are appreciated - add yours in comments. 

  • To Kill A Mockingbird - Harper Lee via @Philipharv inter alia

  • Shadow of the Wind - Carlos Ruiz Zafon

  • A Fine Balance - Rohinton Mistry via @Mr__Gus

  • also Family Matters - Rohinton Mistry via @UKPizzaLover

  • A Suitable Boy - Vikram Seth

  • The Impressionist - Hari Kunzru

  • Glass Room - Simon Mawr via @sophieraworth

  • The Time-Travellers Wife - Audrey Niffenegger via @craftilicious

  • Love in the Time of Cholera - Gabriel Garcia Marquez via @superjonnyonion

  • Saturday - Ian McEwan - via @ianfflood

  • French Lieutenants Woman - John Fowles via @Carole_Benton

  • Neverwhere - Neil Gaiman via @wordycat

  • The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Society - Mary Ann Shaffer via @HNolan10
I am going to add: 

We Need to talk about Kevin - Lionel Shriver

The Poisonwood Bible - Barbara Kingsolver

Half of a Yellow Sun - Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

Wolf Hall - Hilary Mantel 


Monday, 26 September 2011

Children's books on Tudors

Here is a list of your Twitter suggestions of great books for children to read around their school study on Tudors (year 3).

Tudors & Stuarts - Fiona Patchett

Tudors, A very Peculiar History - Jim Pipe

The Time-travelling Cat and the Tudor Treasure - Julia Jarman

Tudors Craft Topics - Rachel Wright

Tudors Creative History Packs - Jane Bower

Tudor Times (Essential History Guides)

Childrens British History Encyclopedia - Parragon

Kings & Queens - Tony Robinson
The Worst Children's Jobs in History - Tony Robinson

Henry VIII + the Mary Rose - Elizabeth Newbery

Cue for Treason - Geoffrey Trease

A Traveller in Time - Alison Uttley

Tuesday, 26 July 2011

Booker longlist


That's the summer's reading sorted then ....

MAN BOOKER 2011 LONGLIST

  • Julian Barnes - The Sense of an Ending
  • Sebastian Barry - On Canaan's Side
  • Carol Birch - Jamrach's Menagerie
  • Patrick deWitt - The Sisters Brothers
  • Esi Edugyan - Half Blood Blues
  • Yvvette Edwards - A Cupboard Full of Coats
  • Alan Hollinghurst - The Stranger's Child
  • Stephen Kelman - Pigeon English
  • Patrick McGuinness - The Last Hundred Days
  • AD Miller - Snowdrops
  • Alison Pick - Far to Go
  • Jane Rogers - The Testament of Jessie Lamb
  • DJ Taylor - Derby Day

Monday, 9 May 2011

Books to read with 5 year olds

In my experience, children at this age love to read a whole range of books, including sometimes quite sophisticated stories and tales from history in chapter form. Recently, publishers and readers have bemoaned the fact that parents sometimes move children on from picture books too early. Children who are just beginning to read still get so much pleasure from gorgeous illustrations, which fire their imaginations, so the following is a mix of picture books and story books I hope you'll find 5 year olds will love looking at and being read.

Oops! Pennie Kidd (parents + child forgive each other for those mishaps through the day)
Traction Man - Mini Grey (a boy gets his longed-for Christmas present)
A new house for mouse - Petr Horacek (mouse meets new friends in search for bigger home)
The Mousehole Cat - Antonia Barber + Nicola Bayley (re-telling of a tale from 16th C. Cornish history)
What Baby Wants (particularly lovely if you have a new baby in the house)
Love you Forever - Robert Munsch (although I defy you not to cry while reading this)
Charlotte's Web - EB White (warning: remember, they are saving Wilbur from the fate of pigs on a farm)

Katie in London/Katie and the Dinosaurs (series) James Mayhew
Terry Deary's Egyptian/Roman/Greek etc Tales (series)

Anything by:
Richard Scarry - including What Do People Do All Day?

Beatrix Potter
Francesca Simon - Horrid Henry series
Jez Alborough - including Some Dogs Do, Captain Duck, Where's My Teddy
the Flat Stanley series
Winnie the Witch - Valerie Thomas + Korky Paul
Mrs Pepperpot series
Charlie and Lola
Harry and his Bucketful of Dinosaurs
Meg and Mog
Dr Seuss

Wednesday, 23 March 2011

Classics - best retellings for children.

I would like your help for this one, please.

My children are interested in the Greek Myths, in King Arthur, in lots of classical myths and legends.

I am wondering which versions you have found the most accessible for children. We have read a few - some with more success than others.

Please let me know which authors have made the ancient stories compelling for children.

Over to you.

Tuesday, 22 March 2011

Books that really make them laugh

There are lots of humorous books written for children, but which are the ones which really make them laugh? Which are the ones you know really tickle them, because you hear the giggles?

These are a few which provoke the snorts in our house. (They are all good for 7yrs+ readers who are reading to themselves, but younger children will enjoy most books if you are reading to them.)

Mr Gum (series)                            Andy Stanton
Captain Underpants (series)          Dav Pilkey

Krazy Kow Daves the World ...    Jeremy Strong

Dear Dumb Diary                          Jim Benton (like Wimpy Kid, but from a girl's perspective)

The Twits                                       Roald Dahl

Also boys love comic strips, and Calvin and Hobbes is laugh out loud, as well as touching and wise.

Please add yours.

Poetry for Children

Children are really open to poetry, in a way that many of us lose when we grow up.

This may be because so many children's books rhyme, and feel like poetry, so the leap is not so great from the rhyming prose, which they are familiar with, to poems.

It is wonderful reading poetry to, and with, children.

Here are some of the poems, poetry books, and rhyming stories that we love. Please add your own suggestions.

Poems for younger children:

Tickle My Nose (and other action rhymes)    Kaye Umansky
One Fish, Two Fish, Red Fish, Blue Fish      Dr Seuss
Oops!                                                              Pennie Kidd
A Book of Things                                           Freddie McKeown
Some Dogs Do                                               Jez Alborough
Where the Wild Things Are                           Maurice Sendak (reads like a poem)
My Granny Went to Market                           Stella Blackstone
Down the Back of the Chair                           Margaret Mahy

Getting older:

Revolting Rhymes                                           Roald Dahl
The Dangerous Journey                                   Tove Jansson (Moomins) retold by Sophie Hannah

One Hundred Years of Poetry for Children     (Oxford)
Can We Have Our Ball Back Please?              Gareth Owen 
Collected Poems for Children                           Gareth Owen


Other great poets who write for children:

Benjamin Zephaniah
Michael Rosen (check out his own performances of his poems on Youtube)
Roger McGough