The Four-Story Mistake

Four Story Mistake children's book

Published: 1942 Theme: Country Life Best for: 9 to 12 "Wasn't it a miracle to live in the country in spring? And to have a wonderful family that she was crazy about, and a house with a secrect room and a cupola...?" The second of four books about the Melendys, these four very street-savvy children are now quite at home roaming the forest...

Gone-Away Lake

Gone Away Lake Children's book

Published: 1957 Theme: Imagination Best for: 8 to 10 "After a while, when he saw that nothing was going to pounce on him and that he probably wasn't going to be struck by lightning, he allowed his sobs to die down and turn into hiccups." The first of several books about three children and their summer adventures, is an unusual children's book, delighting in flights of fancy...

The Railway Children

by E. Nesbit, first published 1906. "Very wonderful and beautiful things do happen, don't they? And we live most of our lives in the hope of them." While the brilliant author Edith Nesbit may be best known for her liberal use of magic and fantasy, not all her books include magic. In this very likeable book, The Railway Children, we discover something even more important than magic...We discover that even in difficult situations, there is magic to be found right in daily life, if we only have eyes to see it...

The Saturdays

Published: 1941 Theme: Growing Up in the City Best for: 6 to 12 "The room in which they were sitting might have been called a playroom, schoolroom or nursery to most people. But to the Melendys, it was known as the Office." In The Saturdays, the first children's book in the series known as The Melendy Quartet, we are introduced to the four Melendy children, ranging in ages from six to thirteen...

The Enchanted Castle

by E. Nesbit, first published 1907 "There is a curtain, thin as gossamer, clear as glass, strong as iron, that hangs forever between the world of magic and the world that seems to us to be real." The quote for this children's book says it all. Edith Nesbit is a master of leading children from…

Momo

Children's Book - Momo

Published: 1973 Theme: The Value of Time Best for: ages 10 to adult "There's a place like the one you visited in every living soul, but only those who let me take them there can see it, nor can it be seen with ordinary eyes." If there was only one children's book I could put on the list of must-read, yet hardly known, children's books, it would have to be Momo. I fell in love with the book, despite the fact that when I first went to read it...

Now We Are Six

by A. A. Milne, first published 1927 "I found a little beetle, so that Beetle was his name, And I called him Alexander and he answered just the same" This second children's book of poetry by Milne is actually my favorite. If I were to pick one of the two he wrote, I'd pick this…

When We Were Very Young

by A. A. Milne, first published 1924 "A bear, however hard he tries, Grows tubby without exercise..." At first glance, one might think that this, the very first children's book by A. A. Milne, would be more appropriate for much younger children. However, one of the criteria for great literature for kids is the use…

The World of Pooh

Winnie The Pooh

by A. A. Milne, First published 1926. "Sing Ho! for the life of a Bear! Sing Ho! for the life of a Bear"Who among us doesn't know the world of Winnie-the-Pooh? To read it is to be a child again, seeing the world with utter innocence and simplicity.