Subject: Don't forget the treasure hunts!
Author:
Posted on: 2015-04-15 15:38:00 UTC
I think I still have my compilation book for that series around the house somewhere...
Subject: Don't forget the treasure hunts!
Author:
Posted on: 2015-04-15 15:38:00 UTC
I think I still have my compilation book for that series around the house somewhere...
It could even be one that you still love today.
Mine, you ask? "The Whipping Boy" by Sid Fleischman without a doubt, published in 1987. I still read it sometimes. It uses one true fact from medieval days and bases a whole story around it. Short, but still with a good plot, and not babyish. Certainly not for babies. More for ages nine/ten and up. But it's a great story to open the eyes to the wonders of reading at a young age. A story that can do that and not sound like it's only written for kids is a rare gem.
This may cause some controversy, so sorry in advance.
I personally liked the stories of the Bible. The Old Testament, in particular, was what seems to me today like a very big story that runs off itself. Of course, I see it that way because my College requires that I study the Bible, but at the time of my childhood, I still loved it.
There's the story of the Garden of Eden, where the serpent lies to Adam and Eve about the fruit (which, as I learned, contrary to popular belief, was probably not an apple). And what's a good story without a good Curse?
Then there was the story of Cain and Able, who were most definitely not very good sibling role models. Well, Cain wasn't, but you could argue that a dead man isn't a good role model either.
After that was the story of Noah and the Ark. Whether you're a Christian or not, this story is a good example of how, in the words of my late grandfather, "not to take no s*** from nobody."
There was the story of the Tower of Babel. I will never look at John Lennon's "Imagine" the same way ever again. (Hippie) Sorry, I just don't trust hippies very much. One stole my wallet.
After that was Abraham, who was ready to make the sacrifice of his own son, despite the fact that he was his only son, and despite the fact that God promised to make his line into a great nation. If you ever want to brush up on suspense, try the story of Abraham almost sacrificing his son Isaac. (Not that I'm suggesting that EVERYONE read the Bible. I mean, you can if you want to, but I'm not going to make anyone do anything.)
Then there was the story of the life of Jacob. Interestingly enough, "Jacob" or Ya'aqov, in Hebrew, means, more or less, "liar." That doesn't really sound politically correct, does it? That the father of the Twleve Tribes of Israel, and therefore the Jews, is named "liar?" I'm not saying anything anti-Semitic at all, I swear. I'm just stating the facts. (If this is an example of the Laws of Cosmic Irony, then it's a rather offensive one, to the culturally sensitive, sort of like myself, I guess.)
After that is the story of Joseph and the coat of many colors. Who knows? Maybe the coat was tie-dyed. (I still don't trust the hippie movement. *hides wallet*) Interestingly enough for the story of Moses, Joseph was the one who built what Moses wanted to break apart.
The story of Moses was an interesting one. To start with, Moses was a killer. He killed a man, "with this thumb". (Reference!) Then he comes back to tell Pharaoh to screw off the Jews, despite the fact that Moses had a speech impediment of some kind. Then he did the Ten Plagues, and whupped Pharaoh's butt. Then after that, he had to deal with the whining people he had just saved. (You'd think that God's chosen people would have been more appreciative, but I'm saying this in hindsight, so...) Then Moses brought the Ten Commandments, and- And this is what most people don't know. Moses actually BROKE the Ten Commandments. By smashing the tablets in a fit of anger. Long day at work, I guess.
Then there was the story of Joshua. It's not just a story about walking around Jericho until it fell down. His story is a story about spies, and prostitutes (*insert Lil' Jon "YAYAH!" here*), and freaking GIANTS, and the simultaneous circumsion of an entire arm- eh, never mind...
After that was the gruesome Book of Judges. People get gang raped, children get burned alive, and an entire army of Philistines get slaughtered by a single man with the jawbone of a donkey. In the last case, I'm talking about Samson. A Canon Sue? I think he was. He was a jerk, he was uncouth, he was sexist, he was bitter, and he died seeking revenge. But if he were from the Lord of the Rings, Samson would have been on Jay and Acacia's hit list, no doubt about it.
Then there was the extremely depressing story of Job, but I won't go into that. We want happy thoughts here. (Despite what I have already brought to the table.)
Then comes a story that, even if you don't believe the Bible, is a very good story, if for no other reason than that it has a bad guy, a good guy who becomes what the bad guy should have been, and a freaking GIANT! David. Yeah, his is a great story, and it starts with King Saul. Saul was a great military leader, he was a hunk, and he was a political compromiser. He wanted everyone to feel happy. But he screwed up, so God decided that David should be king. David comes on the radar when he kills Goliath, a towering showoff who turns out was all show and no... No nothing, actually. He was beaten by a child who threw rocks at him. Come to think of it, Goliath kinda sucked. Anyway, David is the new superstar, and Saul feels threatened by this, and tries to have David killed. But David goes into hiding, and Saul is killed in battle with the Philistines.
David's son Solomon was an interesting character. He would probably not be on the list of Canon Sues of the Bible, despite his supposedly being one of the wisest men in history. (To all you ladies reading this, notice that I said "wisest man" in history. Gender equality, am I right?) Unfortunately for "the wisest man in history," he made some very stupid mistakes. He had I think seven hundred wives and three hundred concubines! I know, right? Imagine the reality TV show that would create. (*shudder*) But Solomon then gets clinically depressed, and gets in real deep to theology and the philosophy of being happy, and lots and lots of existential stuff that it isn't my place to explain without stepping into "I'm preaching a sermon" territory. And I have a responsibility not to do that here, because not everyone agrees with my views. This isn't about existential theology, it's about a good story. Or in my case, a lot of them.
Then came the Prophets. Oh boy, the Prophets. First of all, according to my Old Testament professor, these guys only showed up when people were screwing up pretty badly, so this is the point where stuff starts to get "good," to use a subjective term in regards to storytelling.
The most famous of the Prophets among the children of the church is Jonah, who was, according to the story, eaten by a fish and spat back out at Nineveh when he tried to avoid going there to preach. (Cosmic Irony strikes again!) The smell was probably pretty bad, but hey! At least he got a free ride, right? But Jonah was kind of a whiner.
- Jonah: "I don't want to go to Nineveh! I don't wanna go to Nineveh!"
- God: "Go to Nineveh."
- Jonah: "I don't wanna eat my peas!"
- God: "Jonah, eat your peas."
Then came a lot of other prophets who had hard to pronounce names, but they worked in the time that led up to the split of Israel into Israel and Judah.
Oh, I forgot to mention my favorite prophet.
Nobody knows his real name. Nobody knows where he came from. He couldn't read. He couldn't write. He didn't bathe, and he never knew how to use a comb or a razor. He never lived in a house in his life, and he ate grasshoppers. He was called a mad man, and these claims weren't altogether unsubstantiated. He called himself Elijah. He challenged the King of Israel, who succumbed to the peer pressure of his wife Jezebel, and began worshipping Baal. Elijah challenged the Baal prophets to a game of sorts, and set the date and set the rules of the game. The Baal prophets would pray to Baal, and Elijah would pray to God. If Baal set his altar on fire, then he was real. If God set his altar on fire, then He was real. But instead of going at the same time, Elijah waited for the Baal prophets. He laughed at them, insulted them, and got all snarky and sarcastic with them. Eventually, the Baal prophets began cutting themselves to get Baal's attention. (By the way, if there are any cutters reading this, know that we are here for you.) Then it was Elijah's turn. He was so confident that he actually poured three large jars of water on his altar. According top the story, God not only managed to set it on fire, but he disintegrated it. Marvin the Martian wants that weapon, and he wants to point it at our planet.
Eventually, Israel and Judah both get carried away into captivity in Babylon and Assyria. This doesn't last though, and the Jews return home. But things aren't the same anymore, and the Old Testament ends.
Now, I want to reiterate something very important. I am NOT here to evangelize to anyone. I'm not here to preach. All I'm saying is that the Bible has a healthy variety of fascinating stories. As a child, I had to read these stories. And I enjoyed them. I didn't understand the existential theological and philosophical implications of the Bible, and I didn't understand some of the big words, but I understood that these were good stories. My personal favorites were the stories of Moses the killer-turned-leader, Elijah the madman prophet, and David the king. From story telling standpoints, these could all be used to make some very great variations, and I believe that even secular people would enjoy them. Just my opinion, but still...
Now, if I could find a Quran to read, I may say something similar about the stories I find in there. I don't know, because I have never read the Quran. I would try to say the same thing about an Atheist work of literature, but I'm taking Biology here in college, and it's really not my favorite class. Okay, I'll admit that that may have been bad taste to say that about Atheists, because there are Atheists who are not Biologists. After all, Mark Twain was an Atheist. John Milton was an Atheist. Jason Aaron, a guy who wrote for Marvel Comics, was an Atheist. So I guess Marvel Comics could be a reasonable example of Atheist literature, and one that they can be proud of and be given credit for, even by us Christians. Credit where credit's due. Thank you, Atheists.
I'm floundering here. Just trying to avoid controversy. I promise that I am not trying to offend anyone, and I'm not trying to provoke a conversation about religion, or philosophy, or anything like that. That would be SERIOUS BUSINESS, and we don't like that here.
I'm gonna shut up now before I make things worse for myself.
Thanks for listening and understanding what I'm getting at here (hopefully).
Dark Brother 16
Honestly I loved all the Dragonlance books, but I started with War of the Lance when I was about six. When I was a little older, around ten, my dad let me read the Drizzt Do'Urden books, and I really enjoyed those too.
Also when I was in first grade I read the Hobbit like five times, but I haven't read it since I was twelve so I wouldn't call it a favorite. If I did have to go for a single book, it'd probably be Willow, which I also read numerous times.
I loved learning. Still do, as it happens. Knowledge is power, guard it well. So educational books aimed at children that don't suck? Count me in. I have every single Horrible Histories book, every Horrible Science, every Horrible Geography, and even some of the weird off-brand versions like Dead Famous and The Knowledge. I used to just sit there, reading and learning, making my mind better because even then I knew my body was just... wrong, in a way I couldn't really articulate.
But since this isn't PBS, Harry Potter all the way.
When I was really young, I'd have to give another nod to The Magic School Bus as well as MacNulty's The Way Things Work. At about seven or eight I hit the Animorphs series, and it was all uphill from there.
If you mean any time before adulthood, then either Melville's Moby Dick or Harry Potter or LotR.
Now if you mean up to 13 or so then either Harry Potter or the Hardy Boys.
Now if you mean up to 4 or 5, i.e., Seuss and the like, the it is Dr. Seuss' Mr. Brown Can Moo. That it has been as long as it has and I still remember my parents reading it to me speaks volumes. Much like The Wizard of Oz.
Medieval-ish setting? Check.
Food? Check.
Awesome writing style? Check.
Fighting hares? Check.
Redwall Abbey? Check.
Although they're no longer on my bookshelves the Redwall books will always have a place in my heart.
Just... Dr. Seuss. I grew up with that.
As I grew older, it was Animorphs and Goosebumps. I still remember Animorphs extremely fondly, and consider it one of my main fandoms.
Goosebumps I don't remember as well, and . . . Actually, for fun last year, I reread all the Night of the Living Dummy titles and it really didn't hold up. The whole, "the parents don't believe the children about the supernatural thing" thing approaches the neglectful, and the way the siblings in some of the stories are so mean to each other feels really unrealistic now. I would still recommend #10 of the original series, The Ghost Next Door. It's very atypical of Goosebumps, and has a sweet little story.
And yes, I still have the full series of both, displayed on my bookshelves. :)
Ones I particularly remember are The Wizard of Oz, Mrs. Piggle-Wiggle (anybody remember those?), Harry Potter, Narnia, Charlotte's Web, and various Dear America/My Name is America books.
I remember The Whipping Boy, too. That was a great book!
With her upside-down house and her unusual cures for bad children! I think the radish one was my favorite. XD
I think I still have my compilation book for that series around the house somewhere...
I'm not sure it's entirely accurate to list her as a favorite childhood author, but she's certainly the one that's had the most influence on my writing style.
I loved Diana Wynne Jones, it was really her that got me into some of the more modern fantasy stuff (even though her work isn't that modern, it helped me branch out).
Eragon.
how I loved (still love) those books. I love them to Itty bitty pieces in all their poorly written glory.
and I will defend them to the death even knowing their flaws.
(in case it isn't obvious, I am willfully wearing nostalgia goggles wrt to this book series)
Either pick one of the Famous Five books, (excluding Smugglers Top, never did like that one for some reason), or one of the Adventure Series. Either way Enid Blyton was definitely my favorite author as a child.
I was just talking about this not two days ago. Had no idea how to answer then either. There were just so many good books.
I remember loving Goosebumps and Animorphs and, if you count middle schoolers as children (I do), Warriors, A Series of Unfortunate Events and Restaurant at the End of the Universe.
My favorite, if I absolutely had to pick one, though, would be Peter and the Starcatchers. An alternate origin story of Peter Pan just so full of magic and humor. Nothing I read captured my imagination quite like that did. I vividly remember being scared out of my wits by Ombra, the horrible villain of the later books who was literally darkness incarnate. *Shudders.*
OH! And does anyone else remember Captain Underpants? I adored those books.
I discovered the first book on my fifth grade teacher's bookshelf and borrowed it so many times she just let me have it. Of course, then I had to beg my parents for the sequels when I found those, too. Lord Ombra still freaks me out even today. Wouldn't fancy sending any agents up against him. ^^;
And I never really got into Captain Underpants thanks to there being only one (The Attack of Professor P. P. Poopypants, if I remember correctly) in my school's library and my mom felt they were too crude for me to read. :/ Now I feel deprived.
Actually, most of my major fandoms I discovered when I was pretty young: Animorphs, Percy Jackson, Ranger's Apprentice, Artemis Fowl, trilogy, Dragonriders of Pern and Septimus Heap were all discovered below the sixth grade year, though it doesn't seem like all that longbago to me.
It's been way too long since I read it. I can't even remember how I got it, but I carried it around with me constantly for years. If I remember correctly, they were going to make a movie out of it, weren't they?
I dunno if I'd recommend reading Captain Underpants now. They are rather crude and silly and I don't remember actually how immature they were. You might not be missing out on that much. I found them a riot when I was a kid, though.
Also, I've not read a lot of those series you listed (and I've never even heard of Septimus Heap). I know one of my classes has a copy of the first Percy Jackson novel. I've been considering picking it up, maybe after I'm done with Fool Moon.
Somehow, The Divide trilogy got cut from the list. :/
Anyway, Septimus Heap is pretty darn good. It involves a seventh son of a seventh son who's apprenticed to the high wizard (wizards can be both male and female, and witches are a different breed of Magyk users entirely— all of them except for one are female), but it also involves a princess who is his adopted sister, and a dragon he inadvertently hatches, a talking messenger rat, and a pretty cool plot involving time travel in one book. I don't want to spoil much in case you decide to read it.
My "childhood favorite" would have to be the Temeraire series. I read a couple of them in second grade where they had the... kids who read well, I think? Anyway, they had a special reading thing and I read those and loved them a lot. After that would be the Harper Hall Pern stuff. The first three Young Wizards books, too. (I once attempted to take the Oath, in the hopes that it'd work. Obviously, it didn't.)
Sadly, I found out my ebook set was of the version where the only (specifiedly) autistic character gets misrepresented and then "cured" at the end. Gah. Thankfully, Duane changed it. UNthankfully, the good version isn't on iBooks. (Sorry about dragging that in, but I just checked my copy of "A Wizard Alone" today.)
I have what probably has to be an up-to-date version of Alone, and that... sort of summarises the plot.
Diane is pretty bad with medical stuff, actually. Well, no - she's pretty good for what she knows. Cancer is a virus. ^_^ The autism... sort of goes the same way.
That said, from memory, he wasn't (particularly) autisti...il the Lone Power got hold of him, so it's induced autism rather than actual. But I'm interested to know what was changed.
hS
. . . she used to be a nurse. I'm pretty sure I saw somebody ask her about the cancer-as-a-virus model (many many moons ago, Dilemma must have just come out), and she said that it was the model in use when she trained.
That was a really long time ago, though, so I hope I'm not lying.
Haven't seen you in a while! *offers fresh SPaGhetti*
By the same person, of the two different editions. Sorry, can't really explain the difference myself right now.
Of the first one: http://ada-hoffmann.livejournal.com/48215.html
Of the second: http://ada-hoffmann.livejournal.com/72353.html
So the 'new' edition is really, really new: 2012, according to the comments. And as of 2013, was only available in e-book format.
I do agree that it sounds like the new version is better, though it also sounds like a major shift in Darryl's character. Given that he was a major character in the first part of the last book (which came out in 2010, so preceeds this), that might cause some problems. Unless, of course, the changes in how Darryl's autism is depicted mean that 'after thinking about it for a minute, Darryl decides to stay autistic' does not render him virtually uncommunicative for the rest of the series. Which I'm guessing is the case, because Diane Duane, she ain't stupid.
Also, I see that the New Millennium Editions exist for all the books, and have - gasp! - a consistent timeline. Yeeeeeeah, that's gonna break next book, betcha.
hS
Diane Duane actually left a comment on the first post saying she's working on the new edition. The internet, srsly. Such a weird place.
hS
I fear the third probably never resonated with me for the same reason I didn't get into Discworld the first time I read it. Eight-year-olds don't always enjoy the sort of things adult readers do. (Not that I'm an adult now, but...)
I liked it. The effort put into it all certainly shows, and it works.
You absolutely won't regret it.
Where the Wild Things Are! The late Maurice Sendak had such a way with books that I like a lot of his work! Little Bear (well okay, he illustrated Little Bear, but he worked on the TV show, so it technically counts), Seven Little Monsters, In the Night Kitchen and so many more! And his aforementioned TV shows were pretty good, albeit mostly for a audience.
Well, relatively speaking. I don't have any major ones from my childhood in the pre-teen sense, but in terms of memorable literature from my past, there's quite a lot of popular book series, and then there's this one from completely out of left field.
Ladies and gents, I give you... Raptor Red.
Basically, it's a 1995 American novel by paleontologist Robert T. Bakker, a third-person account of dinosaurs during the Cretaceous Period, told from the point of view of Raptor Red, a female Utahraptor. Though a bit dated for its time, it's one of the most accurate works of dinosaur media for its day, and it is amazing.
The first time I saw this book, when I was in my mid-teens, it was sold at a local Goodwill for around $3.00, I forget the price. But I still have it to this day, and I've read it cover-to-cover way too many times to count. It's THAT good. Incidentally, most of Velociripper's mannerisms have been influenced extensively by it, which says a lot about how memorable Raptor Red's characterization is. Believable, relatable, and completely plausible in terms of animal behavior.
Harry Potter, hands-down. My earliest memory is scaling a bookshelf to grab the first one and bringing it to mom so she could read it to me. I was reading them to myself by the time I was in Kindergarten; they made up a huge part of my childhood and still have a huge impact on my life.
And I remember reading The Whipping Boy back in second grade! Must've read it at least six or seven times. *nods* Good times.
And it doesn't matter where I'm typing from. Computer or mobile device, it doesn't present that option. Is that normal for anyone else here?
[i]Text you want italicized[/i], only substitute the square brackets for triangular ones.
When I was 7, Harry Potter was published it Poland. It was the first book my aunt bought me, and the first one I've read all by myself.
Also another one is Akademia Pana Kleksa ("Mr. Inkblot's Academy"), a children's book we've read in the elementary school, about a wacky wizard - Professor Ambrosius Inkblot - and his school, where children learn to have fun.