What was your favourite book as a kid?

Oh, when I first started reading for pleasure I would check to see if the book had illustrations, and I wouldn't read it if it didn't. Fortunately, Robinson Crusoe and The Swiss Family Robinsoe were illustrated. :)
 
as a little kid? did i ever tell you how lucky you are? by dr. seuss. that was easy.

Be grateful you’re not in the forest in France
Where the average young person just hasn’t a chance
To escape from the perilous pants eating plants
But your pants are safe, you’re a fortunate guy
You ought to be shouting how lucky am I
 
I mostly read comic books and when I hit my early teens started reading about warships since I was big into building model ships.
 
I had an assload of books as a kid. The first "favorite" I remember was "The Lorax" by Dr Seuss, because Geisel makes every kid's list. I read a LOT of books that I re-read as an adult because I realized that they were supposed to mean things. I LOVED animal farm as a kid and had no idea that it was an allegory for cold war era Russia. Legit thought it was about animals on a farm. Idk there were a lot I liked and didn't get. Narnia; had no idea it was steeped in Christian symbolism, absolutely loved it. Loved the Oz series; did not know L Frank Baum wanted me dead.
 
Sometimes the strangest things happen. It could be pure coincidence, but I'm beginning to doubt it.

I almost posted something about the third "real" book I read as a child. It was The Oregon Trail by Francis Parker. I decided against mentioning it, and went to check HuffPo instead. I clicked on a story about the Bachelorette finale, and was reading the comments when I saw this:

"Whenever I read "Software Sales Executive" I just imagine Nick selling people copies of "Oregon Trail." #TheBachelorette"

Honest to God, I hadn't thought about that book or read or heard anything about it in decades. Just seems an odd coincidence.

I sometimes wonder if this is a dream. I know, that's a weird thought.
 
I started reading very early and found Judy Blume.

Are you there God, its me Margaret got me through my first period.
 
As I was saying to LTR, walk in to the adukt fiction section of a US and UK bookshop and you would be hard pushed to tell the difference, walk into the kids section and they're entirely different.
 
I read lots of sci-fi. Any of a myriad Asimov or Clarke stories rank near the top. iRobot, Songs of Distant Earth, The Foundation series, 2001 ...

Loved The Chronicles of Thomas Covenant, the Unbeliever. Re-read them as an adult. Still interesting and gripping twenty years later.
 
I read lots of sci-fi. Any of a myriad Asimov or Clarke stories rank near the top. iRobot, Songs of Distant Earth, The Foundation series, 2001 ...

Loved The Chronicles of Thomas Covenant, the Unbeliever. Re-read them as an adult. Still interesting and gripping twenty years later.

After I got over my need for illustrations, I read every science fiction book in the school library. Every single one.
 
I used to love books about anatomy and how the human body worked (yeah, yeah, make all your "playing doctor" jokes). Some of them were geared to younger readers -- though not as young as me; I could read before I started school -- but some of them were more textbook-y things that my mother had around the house because she was a nurse.


I pretty much read the entire encyclopedia from cover to cover also. Yes, I was a strange boy.
 
Tom Sawyer
A gift from my grandmother, and the first book I distinctly remember owning. It was lost in a move a few years ago, but I think it ended up being donated to the local library. I miss it greatly, but at least it's in a good place.

20,000 Leagues Under the Sea
I have vivid memories of a particular edition of this from my kindergarten days, and I was lucky enough to find it on Amazon a couple of years back.

War of the Worlds
Dracula
Treasure Island
 
I used to love books about anatomy and how the human body worked (yeah, yeah, make all your "playing doctor" jokes). Some of them were geared to younger readers -- though not as young as me; I could read before I started school -- but some of them were more textbook-y things that my mother had around the house because she was a nurse.


I pretty much read the entire encyclopedia from cover to cover also. Yes, I was a strange boy.

Before I could really read, there was only one book in the house, as far as I recall. It was my mother's old school dictionary. Had a green cover, I remember. I went through the entire thing and looked at the illustrations and put a check mark in pencil beside the things I wanted when I got older, or the things I liked. An illustration of a rhinoceros, for example.
 
Encyclopedia Brown's books.

Also The Three Investigators and The Hardy boys. The small Library in Maine and a winter at 62 degrees inside meant I curled up in bed with book after book till I nearly ran them out titles.

I even worked my way through the Bobbsey Twins, Nancy Drew, and The Happy Hollisters.

I read every book in the juvenile mystery section and 3/4 of the sci-fi section.

It was indeed. She did at least one more mouse-related book too.

Runaway Ralph.

The better of the two.
 
have you re-read it as an adult?

did it inspire creative childhood games? did it disappoint when your grown-up you read it? was it even a children's book or an adult's?

As a young kid I'd say my favorite book was a tie between Where the Wild Things Are and The Giving Tree. I have reread both as an adult as I've read them to my younger cousins (our age difference would make them seem as nieces and a nephew instead) and was not disappointed. In fact, I probably could list all of Shel Silverstein's books as a "favorite". :)

As a somewhat older child I really got into R. L. Stein's Fear Street and Christopher Pike's novels.

In both chapters of my life, the books I loved inspired my own story writing. ("General" fiction and Sci-Fi when quite young, horror as a tween into teen years, and erotic horror as an older teen.)
 
I started reading very early and found Judy Blume.

Are you there God, its me Margaret got me through my first period.

Sadly I received mine before discovering the book. Ona side note, I also read the boys' coming of age tale Then Again Maybe I Won't.
 
As I was saying to LTR, walk in to the adukt fiction section of a US and UK bookshop and you would be hard pushed to tell the difference, walk into the kids section and they're entirely different.

I have found this to be very true. In talking with people from the UK and just reading this thread it amazes at the differences in kids books. I would not be surprised if UK kids, on the whole, read more involved books at an early age with it evening out by middle school.
 
Butters I am not sure. I have heard of Black Beauty but have never read it so I would not be able to answer your question.
 
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