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-   -   Books you read as a child (http://www.sonicyouth.com/gossip/showthread.php?t=871)

krastian 04.13.2006 02:06 AM

Those orange movie monster books.

samantha. 04.13.2006 02:34 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by johnnywinternoshow
rhoal dahl, judy blume, the diaries of adrian mole. thats about all i can remember oh that guy that they based the australian show 'round the twist,' on....

someone jennings


It's Paul Jennings.

My favourite book by Roald Dahl is "James and the Giant Peach". I remember being completely engrossed when my Year 2 teacher was reading that book to the class.

I also read the Harry Potter series..oh, and the Tale of Peter Rabbit! Man, I loved that book when I was a kid.

Hip Priest 04.13.2006 03:43 AM

Catweazle, The Nose Knows and anything featuring the mighty Paddington Bear. He was my fictional hero (still is, really).

 


 

LifeDistortion 04.13.2006 04:07 AM

"Bunnicula" and "The Celery Stalks At Midnight" and "Truely Scary Stories"

truncated 04.13.2006 05:27 AM

Paddington Bear always manages to cheer you up and invoke nostalgia.

Hip Priest 04.13.2006 05:48 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by truncated
Paddington Bear always manages to cheer you up and invoke nostalgia.


Paddington's the greatest.

There are two types of children's story characters, generally. Ones hat teach you to do nothing more than fulfil a societally conditioned role (Postman Pat, Bob the Builder etcc) and those who teach you to be an individual ans explore things (Paddington, etc). I prefer the latter, and I tink children should be generally dissuaded from the former. The exception to the above rules is the very funny and excellent Roobarb and Custard, which was all about spite, one-upmanship and and scorn.

whorefrost 04.13.2006 05:52 AM

peter rabbit
pigling bland
roald dahl
the train that was all "I think I can I think I can..."

jon boy 04.13.2006 05:56 AM

i read a huge amount as a child. i prefered reading to any form of physical activity like spoerts or whatever so was constantly to be found with my head in a book.

i too read clive barker when i was younger although it didnt really have that much of an effect on me. it was the hellbound heart, from which hellraiser was spawned but it didnt get to me nearly as much as a book i read about the aftermath of a bombing the title of which forever escapes me.

porkmarras 04.13.2006 06:30 AM

I did'nt read much as a child.I spent most of the time by myself drawing and painting.

Kim C Not G 04.13.2006 07:36 AM

A Wrinkle in Time- Sorry , don't remember the author's name.
There's a part of the book where they go to this planet where everyone's the same and every kid is outside bouncing the ball at the same beat. That always stuck with me and I don't know why.

The Witch's Button - Again, can't remmeber the author.
I was so scared of that book I couldn't even finish it. Scared of a book! ha I was such a wimp. Eventually I did read the damn book and it wasn't even close to being scary. I pysched myself out.

samuel 04.13.2006 09:58 AM

yeahhh
Fantastic Mr. Fox

for sure

ploesj 04.13.2006 10:57 AM

definitely roald dahl.. matilda was the first book i ever read (in one day-i was six) so i think that says enough :D his short stories are genius too

Amaranth 04.13.2006 11:04 AM

the velveteen rabbit, the little prince, roald dahl books, dr suess books, and where the wild things are

samuel 04.13.2006 11:30 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Amaranth
the velveteen rabbit, the little prince, roald dahl books, dr suess books, and where the wild things are


Where the Wild Things Are!
awesome

nomadicfollower 04.13.2006 03:45 PM

A Wrinkle in Time is by Madiliene Engels (can't spell it) I love that book and I liked some of her others.
Oh yeah, The Redwall series were the shit. I spent a whole year reading nothing but those books.

TheDom 04.13.2006 03:48 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Hip Priest
Paddington's the greatest.

There are two types of children's story characters, generally. Ones hat teach you to do nothing more than fulfil a societally conditioned role (Postman Pat, Bob the Builder etcc) and those who teach you to be an individual ans explore things (Paddington, etc).


That is why I love Dr. Seuss.

I don't know why but I've always been fascinated with him.

Him and Houdini. Two crazy peeps.

finding nobody 04.13.2006 03:50 PM

suuss owns! ive heard alot about his stories being very metaphorical. which is rad!

golden child 04.13.2006 03:53 PM

velveteen rabbit is great!

Kim C Not G 04.13.2006 04:13 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by nomadicfollower
A Wrinkle in Time is by Madiliene Engels (can't spell it) I love that book and I liked some of her others.
Oh yeah, The Redwall series were the shit. I spent a whole year reading nothing but those books.


That's her name! Thanks.

luxinterior 04.14.2006 11:22 PM

I think her name is spelled Madeleine L'Engle. Whatever it was, it was weird. I read A Wrinkle In Time and all of the books that were sort of sequels to it, in a way. Same basic characters. Some were way better than the others. A Wrinkle In Time was the best, of course. When I was in grade school I read the whole thing to my youngest brother, who was about four years old. I did the same thing with the Harry Potter books, which I still read obsessively.

Danny, The Champion of the World was, by far, my favorite Roald Dahl book.

The Werewolf of Fever Swamp was the best Goosebumps. I collected that series up until about #80 or so, I think. Haha, I guess I was in the third or fourth grade, and it finally hit me that the series was declining in quality.

It's difficult for me to remember all the books I read as a kid. I read so many. Whenever I would go to my friends' houses, they would always have TVs or computers in their rooms, or a basketball hoop outside, and there was never a shortage of things to do. The only cool thing I had at my house for the longest time was a Super Nintendo. I remember at first being too scared to play it. So I just read books all the time instead.

My absolute favorite book as a very small child was this one that came in a Reader's Digest children's book collection. It was called Rumples and Tumbles Go to the Country. In it, two toy rabbits search all over the countryside for a real live rabbit. On their way, they meet a bunch of different animals, and one of the rabbits always ends up saying, "If that's a rabbit, then I'm the Queen of England!" My favorite part was when they met a cow and it stuck its head through the bushes. I flipped to that page so many times that it fell out. Thankfully, my dad had memorized the entire page verbatim (and it was pretty long), so he wrote it all out on an index card and stuck it in place of the old page.


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