Or what did your now beyond 7 year old read when they were 7? or thereabouts?
Tim and I were talking about reading earlier. We do a lot of talking about education – yesterday we were debating how much you learn about history from visiting places like Bolsover Castle, frozen in time by English Heritage. I’m tempted to the idea that rebuilding bits of it doesn’t help what you can learn from it, but as Tim says, if they didn’t repair it, there wouldn’t be anything left to learn from in quite a short space of time.
Anyway, Big has finally finished The Railway Children (thank goodness they don’t have fines on children’s books at our library!), and I think she might be nearly there with The Secret Garden
as well. She has savoured these books rather than devouring them, and it may well be a better way to read than my blink and you’ve missed it approach. Although I do go back and reread books that I’ve enjoyed – I’ve reread a whole bunch of Pern
stories in the last week or so, as well as finally getting around to The Time Traveler’s Wife
(possibly not the best timed exposure to that particular story, but I enjoyed it anyway).
But back to Big. She has a shelf in her room of children’s books that I’ve acquired over the years, some dating back to my own childhood, but also books that I’ve picked up for my children to enjoy. She’s got some Rumer Godden, Noel Streatfield, there’s Goodnight Mr Tom that I bought for her on holiday, amongst others that I can’t remember now, and don’t want to go upstairs to look at given that Tim’s trying to have a nap just now. But there aren’t very many recent books, as I’ve not done a lot of reading of children’s fiction recently. I know of authors like Anne Fine, Jacqueline Wilson, Michael Morpugo, Philip Pullman (him I have read), and I do even have a couple of Harry Potters should she wish to indulge, although we’ve rather missed the boat on the whole phenomenon there. So I was hoping that any of you with children around or slightly above this age group could either offer from your own experience, or perhaps even ask your children what sort of stuff they’d recommend, and either drop us a line in the comment box, or blog about it yourself and drop us a link back instead.
Ta.




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