The Neverending Story

Neverending Story-Children's Book

Published 1979 Theme: Fantasy Best for: Boys age 11-12 Almost written like a classic morality play, this amazing children's book weaves a message about selfishness and pride without ever appearing terribly heavy-handed. The fantasy elements of the story, a boy finding himself in a story being written as he appears in it, brings the reader far away from the real world.

A Wind In The Door

children's book - a wind in the door

Published 1973 Best for: 12 years and up Theme: Fantasy Five stars After reading A Wind in the Door, I understand why the fantasy genre in a children's book is so addicting. With skillful writing, such as L'Engle brings, you lose all sense of what is possible and what is not possible, or, as the teacher says in this book, What is real?...

The Cat Who Went To Heaven

Cat who went to heaven - Children's Book

First published 1931 Best for: Ages 8-12 Theme: Compassion Five Stars This story is so delicately written, with little poems prefacing each chapter, that your heart just opens more and more. The theme of sacrifice is presented in a very careful and thoughtful manner...

The Midwife’s Apprentice

Midwife's Apprentice Children's Book

Published; 1995 Theme: Women's Historical Fiction Best for: Girls, age 12 and up A wonderful book to use as class reading for bringing history, especially women's history, alive. Set in fourteenth century England, the story of an impoverished orphan and her role in the society of the day is compelling...

Swallows and Amazons

by Arthur Ransome first published 1930. Imagine reading an exciting children's book where perhaps many of the terms don't make any sense, but it doesn't matter in the least. As I follow the children's adventures on their sailboats on a lake, I'm right there, even if I don't know starboard from -- what is the opposite? The adventures, and the well developed characters of the children and others is so entrancing, that details don't really get in the way...

The Borrowers

Borrowers: Series of Children's Books

Published 1955 Theme: Imagination Best for: Under 11 The series of five children's books by Norton, beginning with The Borrowers, and continuing with the Borrowers Afield, Aloft, Afloat, Avenged..., are in a group by themselves. The imagination that Norton brings to the tales of these little people that live in houses, off the the lost items of humans, is so creative, that it seems like it must be true...

The Trumpet of the Swan

by E. B. White, published 1970. What could be more fantastical than a swan who can't make his trumpeting sounds and so carries a trumpet. This wonderful image seems to real because E. B. White makes it so. The wonderful descriptions of nature, the lovely relationship between the boy Sam and the swan, and the feeling of life in the wild all create such a vivid experience that one forgets that perhaps a swan carrying a trumpet is make-believe..

A Little Princess

by Frances Hodgson Burnett, first published 1905. "Perhaps there is a language which is not made of words and everything in the world understands it." A Little Princess is one the best children's books I've read so far. It turns out I'm not alone in my assessment, as it continually rates in the top 100 lists among teachers, education associations, and others. Illustrating through example the power of kindness and good thoughts, this book is a masterpiece...

Swallowdale

by Arthur Ransome, first published 1931. No author of children's books gives children's imagination the place of honor in the same way that Arthur Ransome does. Throughout the entire book, we live within the imaginative world that the four children (and their two friends) have created for themselves...

Half Magic

by Edward Eager, published 1954 "This summer, the children had found some books by a writer named E. Nesbit, surely the most wonderful books in the world. They read every one that the library had, right away..." If the children in Half Magic hadn't discovered the children's books by E. Nesbit, neither would I, and…