Your favorite kids books

edith headedith head 5,106 Posts
edited September 2007 in Strut Central
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  • akoako https://soundcloud.com/a-ko 3,413 Posts
    IMG src=http://www.collectorsconnection.com/sweet_pickles.jpg>

    im in the process of collecting them all...

    i had some favorites but i cant remember what they were called. my class read cloudy with a chance of meatballs in 2nd grade though.

    chicka-chicka boom boom was a big hit around my elementary school.

  • akoako https://soundcloud.com/a-ko 3,413 Posts
    oh and i cant forget one of my very favorites....

    IMG src=http://www.ksu.edu/english/nelp/images/johnson.books/haroldandpurple.gif>


    i also loved roald dahl...who was the dude who did the illustrations on most of those books..the really sketchy cartoony ones? that dude was awesome. i wouldnt let my mom read me a roald dahl book till we found a copy with that dudes illustrations in it.

  • ooh raer!

    i'm 7 away from completing my harlin quist collection








  • akoako https://soundcloud.com/a-ko 3,413 Posts
    i'm 7 away from completing my harlin quist collection

    none of those ring a bell, but they look amazing. those illustrations you posted just blew my mind.

    how long has this collection taken? i just started my sweet pickles collection a couple months ago, and im probably halfway there (with a number of duplicates because i never remember which ones i have already)

    the annoying thing is the books came in two sizes, and ive already dedicated myself to only collecting the small ones, but i already have 2 or 3 big ones, and have passed on big ones after i decided to only collect small ones, so i dont know if i should just get rid of the big ones and keep going or slowly try to collect all the big ones too?

    plus theres merchandise up the wazzoo, i have the octopus toothbrush holder in the box and i gave my girlfriend the thing that sparked it all off to begin with, the upper half of a lion avon bottle...

  • akoako https://soundcloud.com/a-ko 3,413 Posts
    oh, by no means is this a kids book, but i used to stare at every page of this book for HOURS when i was little, amazing, bizzare, incredibly detailed images filling every page. for some reason it seems like i remember the cover to our copy being different but im positive its the same book:

    IMG src=http://ec1.images-amazon.com/images/G/01/ciu/b3/0f/fcb8b2c008a0c0128f819010._AA240_.L.jpg>

    if you ever spot it in a bookstore, take a look at it... i dont even remember if there was a story to it or it was more along the lines of an incredibly difficult "i spy" type book (mostly because id pretty much just stare at the pictures)...

    which of course brings me to yet another favorite series from my childhood:

    ImG src=http://www.childrenslibrary.org/library/books/m/mrzispy_00260005/thumbs/mrzispy_00260005-0001-thumb4.jpg>

    i was and am a very visual kid.

  • i'm 7 away from completing my harlin quist collection

    none of those ring a bell, but they look amazing. those illustrations you posted just blew my mind.

    how long has this collection taken?

    6 years. my sister brought 3 of these psychedelic kids books as souvenirs for me when she traveled abroad almost 20 years ago. i didn't wise up until a few years ago though when i was going through them again. they were really strange and not very pleasant. think willy wonka only 50 times more morbid. the most valuable one i copped was Mitkey Astromouse one because it was illustrated by the same guy who did Yellow Submarine. mine is tattered but i got a good deal. the publisher was an acid burnout. the rest are pretty common. i slowed down though.

  • akoako https://soundcloud.com/a-ko 3,413 Posts
    AND

    IMG src=http://www.rebeccacaudill.org/teacher/covergallery/1988/light.jpg>

    i love this thread. expect like 2589 more posts from me as i remember more things.

  • akoako https://soundcloud.com/a-ko 3,413 Posts
    i'm 7 away from completing my harlin quist collection

    none of those ring a bell, but they look amazing. those illustrations you posted just blew my mind.

    how long has this collection taken?

    6 years. my sister brought 3 of these psychedelic kids books as souvenirs for me when she traveled abroad almost 20 years ago. i didn't wise up until a few years ago though when i was going through them again. they were really strange and not very pleasant. think willy wonka only 50 times more morbid. the most valuable one i copped was Mitkey Mouse one because it was illustrated by the same guy who did Yellow Submarine. mine is tattered but i got a good deal. the publisher was an acid burnout. the rest are pretty common. i slowed down though.

    i'll keep an eye out for these in the future, they sound very interesting.

  • nzshadownzshadow 5,518 Posts
    Friends brought our 2 year old son a copy of Goodnight Moon.

    He was having trouble at bedtime... temper tantrums, refusing to sleep, tossing everything out of his bed etc...

    Then along came Goodnight Moon.



    Parents take note: There be magic in that book.


  • i'm 7 away from completing my harlin quist collection

    none of those ring a bell, but they look amazing. those illustrations you posted just blew my mind.

    how long has this collection taken?

    6 years. my sister brought 3 of these psychedelic kids books as souvenirs for me when she traveled abroad almost 20 years ago. i didn't wise up until a few years ago though when i was going through them again. they were really strange and not very pleasant. think willy wonka only 50 times more morbid. the most valuable one i copped was Mitkey Mouse one because it was illustrated by the same guy who did Yellow Submarine. mine is tattered but i got a good deal. the publisher was an acid burnout. the rest are pretty common. i slowed down though.

    i'll keep an eye out for these in the future, they sound very interesting.

    yeah they're very dark. common themes were escapism, child abuse and alcoholism! they're not really for kids, but they're very intriguing and the illustrations are mind blowing.


  • akoako https://soundcloud.com/a-ko 3,413 Posts
    Goodnight Moon.

    the funny thing is i knew about, and read this book way before goodnight moon:

    IMG src=http://www.themuses.net/calliope/jumbo/opusnite2.jpg>

    if i remember correctly its kind of loosely a parody of goodnight moon, and im pretty sure one of the characters is shown reading goodnight moon in one of the illustrations. (also the same painting is on the wall on both covers)

    opus isnt really a childrens comic is it? our newspaper didnt carry opus till recently, so i only knew the characters from this book... one day when i was young we wenr to minneapolis and opus was in the sunday comics and i really didnt get the strip at all.
















  • And one I picked up for my goddaughter a couple years ago:





  • HAHA! i have all the encyclopedia brown books. 1st edition!. donald sobel was a genius. bugs meaney was small time. i liked the mysteries that his pops couldn't figure out a lot more.

  • akoako https://soundcloud.com/a-ko 3,413 Posts

    our second grade teacher was going to start reading this book one day and then postponed it because the copy she bought had half the pages randomly upside down.

    a girl i worked with cracked a ramona quimby reference the other day...i loved it

  • stone soup

  • i also have about 20 CYOA books, mostly all early edward g packard





    best thing ever!




  • HAHA! i have all the encyclopedia brown books. 1st edition!. donald sobel was a genius. bugs meaney was small time. i liked the mysteries that his pops couldn't figure out a lot more.

    I'm just trying to figure out what crime features a milkshake, dentures, a dog, and scuba gear. I'ma give it some pretty heavy thought later tonight.

  • I'm just trying to figure out what crime features a milkshake.

  • Where The Sidewalk Ends

    and...


  • SwayzeSwayze 14,705 Posts
    A. Lindgren - The Dragon with the Red Eyes


  • JimsterJimster Cruffiton.etsy.com 6,955 Posts

    FINGERS-IN-HOLE ACTION 4 DAYZ.


    GRUFFALO CRUMBLE 4 DAYZ.

  • JimsterJimster Cruffiton.etsy.com 6,955 Posts

    Saw this and thought of:
    "Out of the fire like Catholic saints
    Comes Scarlett and her deep complaint
    Mimicking tenderness she sees
    In sentimental movies
    A celluloid rider comes to town
    Cinematic lovers sway
    Plantations and sweeping ballroom gowns
    Take her breath away

    Out in the wind in crinolines
    Chasing the ghosts of Gable and Flynn
    Through stand-in boys and extra players
    Magnolias hopeful in her auburn hair
    She comes from a school of southern charm
    She likes to have things her way
    Any man in the world holding out his arm
    Would soon be made to pay

    Friends have told her not so proud
    Neighbors trying to sleep and yelling "not so loud"
    Lovers in anger "Block of Ice"
    Harder and harder just to be nice
    Given in the night to dark dreams
    From the dark things she feels
    She covers her eyes in the X-rated scenes
    Running from the reels

    Beauty and madness to be praised
    'Cause it is not easy to be brave
    To walk around in so much need
    To carry the weight of all that greed
    Dressed in stolen clothes she stands
    Cast iron and frail
    With her impossibly gentle hands
    And her blood-red fingernails

    Out of the fire and still smoldering
    She says "A woman must have everything"
    Shades of Scarlett Conquering
    She says "A woman must have everything"

  • bassiebassie 11,710 Posts
    These are authors and books that made a big impression on me in my years before high school.

    Judy Blume
    Paul Zindel - especially 'The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man-in-the-Moon Marigolds'
    S.E. Hinton
    Lucille Clifton
    V.C. Andrews
    Ezra Jack Keats

    Daddy Was a Number Runner
    Alan and Naomi
    Goodnight Moon
    Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry

    Encyclopedia Brown series
    Sweet Valley High series

    There is a book which I used to love so much when I was very little and it had the picture of a porcupine wearing a torn up sweater on the front. The premise was why animals shoud not wear clothes and the book had different animals wearing clothes least suited to them. I would like to own this book again.

  • Cosign WILD THINGS and GOODNIGHT MOON

    but cannot forget














  • But seriously ...


  • HarveyCanalHarveyCanal "a distraction from my main thesis." 13,234 Posts
    My favorite to read to my daughter as of late...


  • Cosign on a lot of these. This one is possibly my favorite:



    This one was good too:


  • bassiebassie 11,710 Posts




    Oh yes! I have this somewhere on my shelves even now and would still like to be locked into a museum overnight!




  • But seriously ...


    thats pretty much the king. Maurice Sendak is that dude. amazing!!! made me want to become an illustrator this book.
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