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What was your favorite children's book. Mine was The Velveteen Rabbit. I had a stuffed rabbit that went with the book. (Original Post) debm55 May 10 OP
First book I ever owned, Tom Sawyer.. Permanut May 10 #1
Thank you, Permanut. Somehow it got lost. As an adult I bought another book and stuffed rabbit. debm55 May 10 #7
I still have my velveteen rabbit. Ocelot II May 10 #2
Thank you Ocelot II , How nice to have the rabbit and the doll. I enjoyed Kipling's stories also. debm55 May 10 #10
The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe Wicked Blue May 10 #3
Thank you Wicked Blue. When I was teaching I read it to my class. debm55 May 10 #12
Through the looking glass. cayugafalls May 10 #4
How sweet. thank you cayugafalls. debm55 May 10 #13
The Walrus and the Carpenter.. Permanut May 10 #26
Tweedle Dum and Tweedle Dee are the origin of the Walrus, according to Paul McCartney...lol cayugafalls May 10 #50
Thank you very much. cayugafalls. debm55 May 10 #64
Ty Permanut. debm55 May 10 #63
Thank you Permanut, debm55 May 11 #123
Heidi, Black Beauty, and Child's Garden of Verses. yorkster May 10 #5
Wonderful books. ty yorkster. debm55 May 10 #14
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. Because she had dark hair like mine and I thought all princess should not always be a CTyankee May 10 #6
Ty CTyankee. Felt the same too. debm55 May 10 #19
Thanks. I feel ancient since a lot of this discussion is about fairy tale stuff after the creaton of the Internet. I had CTyankee May 10 #27
TY CTyankee, I had the movies. but my first love were the actual books I could feel and smell. Also each steel mill town debm55 May 10 #65
"Heidi" tblue37 May 10 #8
I also loved all the Black Stallion books. tblue37 May 10 #11
Ty tblue37. I remember reading the book a couple of times. Hope you get better. debm55 May 10 #21
"The Story of Ferdinand" and "Make Way for Ducklings" were my early favorites. Harker May 10 #9
Oh you must have been very young, I remember Ferdinand the bull and the little ducklings. Ty, Harker. debm55 May 10 #22
The Mrs. Pigglewiggle books. Lunabell May 10 #15
Ty Lunabell, I read the Little House on the Prairie books. The series on TV was not the same. debm55 May 10 #23
Beverly Cleary has a K-4 school named after her in Portland, Oregon . Permanut May 10 #24
Thank you Permanut. Loved the author Beverly Cleary. debm55 May 11 #93
Henry Huggins was MY favorite book Thunderbeast May 10 #52
Ty Thunderbeast. I remember that book. debm55 May 11 #99
Charlotte's Web. woodsprite May 10 #16
Yeah, Charlotte influenced me. By the time I was 16 I was a vegetarian and at mucifer May 10 #17
Ty woodsprite. I always felt sorry for Charlotte. I know about the spider thing. I was outside the other day and a debm55 May 10 #28
I actually saw some "ballooning" last summer. woodsprite May 10 #41
Ty woodsprite. I have never seen them ballooning. It must have been great to watch. debm55 May 11 #94
I was 7 or 8 when I read it PJMcK May 10 #59
courious george the monkey. AllaN01Bear May 10 #18
Thank you AllaNo1Bear. Did you have the stuffed animal that went with it? debm55 May 10 #30
nope. dont think so. library books. AllaN01Bear May 10 #34
for picture books ... surrealAmerican May 10 #20
TY surrealAmerican. I really liked Blueberries for Sal. debm55 May 10 #31
Charlotte's Web. It was also the first movie I ever saw in a theater.... SKKY May 10 #25
TY SKKY, I saw both movies that were made. You had a visual to go with the book. debm55 May 10 #32
If I had to pick one, it would be "Go, Dog, Go" by P.D. Eastman. Different Drummer May 10 #29
Ty Different Drummer. Loved all of Dr, Seuss. books. Luckily as a child, we had a large Carnegie Library to get all the debm55 May 10 #33
One Dr. Seuss book that I was recently made aware of the existence of is... Different Drummer May 10 #38
TY I don't remember that one, I am going to look it up. debm55 May 10 #39
I loved that! electric_blue68 May 11 #78
The wind in the willows. k55f5r May 10 #35
Yes, the toad. Ty k55f5r, debm55 May 10 #40
Not sure what it says about my personality, but Mole was my favorite... malthaussen May 11 #110
HAHAHAH. TY malthaussen. That is funny. debm55 May 11 #112
"Scuppers the Sailor Dog" by Margaret Wise Brown LastDemocratInSC May 10 #36
ty LastDemocratinSC I really enjoyed Richard Scarry books. debm55 May 10 #42
i read Charlotte's Web as an adult and the cartoon much later . im not a veggin but i have great respect AllaN01Bear May 10 #37
Agree debm55 May 10 #43
Loved "The Wind in the Willows". sinkingfeeling May 10 #44
Thank you sinkingfeeling. Agree here. debm55 May 11 #100
A Wrinkle In Time by Madeline L'Engle. 3catwoman3 May 10 #45
Loved that book! electric_blue68 May 11 #79
Ty 3catwoman3, I didn't know that they made a movie of it. I enjoyed the book. debm55 May 11 #96
The Mother Goose stories. Elessar Zappa May 10 #46
Thank you Elessar Zappa, debm55 May 11 #98
Cars and Trucks and Things that GO!!! Coventina May 10 #47
Ty Coventina. I really enjoyed Richard Scarry's books. I see it was a Golden Book with the gold metallic binding debm55 May 11 #102
My aunt in England Conjuay May 10 #48
Ty Conjuay. Sounds wonderful. debm55 May 11 #104
I am SO old! Tom Sawyer was definitely one of my favorites yellowdogintexas May 10 #49
Ty yellowdogintexas, Wonderful choices. I hate to say it , but I didn't like Barbar either. For some reason it debm55 May 11 #105
Mr. Popper's Penguins. Raven123 May 10 #51
My class read this. I know they did a movie of the book, but nothing beats a book, so I didn't see it. debm55 May 11 #118
Same here. Why see a movie when the magic is in the book! Raven123 May 12 #127
My very first, See Spot Run. Arne May 10 #53
Run Spot Run TY debm55 May 11 #120
Horton Hears a Who The Blue Flower May 10 #54
Loved those books. About 15 years ago. Kohl's would have classic children's books with a stuffy. I have Horton Hears a debm55 May 11 #122
The Pushcart War JoseBalow May 10 #55
ty JoseBalow debm55 May 10 #73
I still have or have replacements for some of the books I have listed. Niagara May 10 #56
Ty Great selection, PS I still read the Pooh books. debm55 May 10 #71
I'm old, so... Jilly_in_VA May 10 #57
Ty Jilly_in _Va Great selection. Some of them I read. too debm55 May 10 #70
Fun With Dick and Jane Emile May 10 #58
HAHAHHAHAHHAHAHAH "see Jane run. Run Jane run. See Spot run Run Spot run,-----Really a whole generation of kids debm55 May 10 #69
The Boxcar Children PJMcK May 10 #60
Ty PJMcK I remember them. As a classroom teacher Scholastic would a lot each teacher a selection. I picked the Boxcar debm55 May 10 #68
Where the wild things are canuckledragger May 10 #61
Oh, canuckledragger. you were not a wild thing. You were a child finding his way as all children must do to grow. I am debm55 May 10 #67
The Black Stallion novels, by Walter Farley Jeebo May 10 #62
Thank you Jeebo, During my teaching days, I read the first Black Stallion to my class. I had read the series as a child. debm55 May 10 #66
It's really interesting that you did that, too. Jeebo May 11 #75
Mike Mulligan And His Steam Shovel Brother Buzz May 10 #72
Ty Brother Buzz, I remember getting the from the library. Have a great day. debm55 May 13 #140
I read Grimm's and Andersen's fairy tales ailsagirl May 10 #74
TY ailsagirl; Great choices. debm55 May 11 #97
I have 3 I_UndergroundPanther May 11 #76
The Silent Miaow is one of the best books ever. 3catwoman3 May 11 #81
Ty 2catwoman3 wonderful post. debm55 May 11 #90
TY I_UndergroundPanther. Freat choices. My 6th grade class had the Phantom Tollbooth as in a play version in their debm55 May 11 #91
The World Book Encyclopedia jmowreader May 11 #77
TY jmowreader. We had the Encyclopedia you would buy weakly at the A&P they were full of pictures. Question for you -- debm55 May 11 #89
Before I graduated from high school I wanted to be an electrical engineer jmowreader May 11 #107
Thank you jmomreader, debm55 May 11 #116
Even perhaps before or concurrent w Dr Suess: Harold and The Purple Crayon! electric_blue68 May 11 #80
Did you notice you could look at the illustrations for the Dick and Jane books. As the series went along, there was less debm55 May 11 #88
debm55..... Upthevibe May 11 #82
Thank you Upthevibe. I liked it but it was sad for me at the end. debm55 May 11 #87
Paddle to the Sea MIGuy May 11 #83
Thank you MIGuy. I remember the illustrations of books I read also. And they do help with understanding. debm55 May 11 #86
Little House on the Prairie Tree Lady May 11 #84
Thank you Tree Lady., debm55 May 11 #85
Ferdinand (the Bull) justaprogressive May 11 #92
I read that too, Agree with you. TY justaprogressive. debm55 May 11 #95
Black Beauty. elleng May 11 #101
Thank you elleng A classic debm55 May 11 #117
The Enormous Egg Mz Pip May 11 #103
Ty Mz Pip debm55 May 11 #121
Jerry Todd books...had the whole set including the Poppy Ott books... MiHale May 11 #106
TY MiHale. They must have been really good to reread. I still read "All Creatures Great and Small" series. debm55 May 11 #119
The first fave book I can recall is Alliepoo May 11 #108
Ty Alliepoo. Very interesting. debm55 May 11 #114
Wind in the Willows... malthaussen May 11 #109
Ty malthaussen . I always loved watercolor illlustrations. Very subtle. debm55 May 11 #115
The Wump World, by Bill Peet. (But I think the Veleveteen Rabbit was the first petronius May 11 #111
TY petrpnius. I agree. debm55 May 11 #113
"At the far edge of town where the grickle-grass grows, Aristus May 11 #124
TY Aristus, Beautiful debm55 May 11 #125
I had LOTS of them RazorbackExpat May 12 #126
Welcome to DU! TomSlick May 12 #128
I also remember the 'Game of the Century" RazorbackExpat May 12 #129
I was present for the Miracle on Markham. TomSlick May 12 #130
Another 1 - point game RazorbackExpat May 12 #131
I like your screen name RazorbackExpat May 13 #133
I have been called Tom Slick for years - at least since the time of Slick Willie. TomSlick May 13 #141
The Phantom Tollbooth. nt Laffy Kat May 12 #132
From my elementary school library, "The Black Stone Knife" dameatball May 13 #134
Thank you dameatball. The book sounds interesting. debm55 May 13 #137
Harold and The Purple Crayon! Dr Suess's Happy Birthday to You book! electric_blue68 May 13 #135
TY electric_blue68 alot of classic there. debm55 May 13 #136
'The Hardy Boys', 'The Three Investigators', and 'Tom Swift'. OldBaldy1701E May 13 #138
Ty OldBaldy1701E You have a great selection of books that you read. debm55 May 13 #139

Ocelot II

(116,140 posts)
2. I still have my velveteen rabbit.
Fri May 10, 2024, 12:07 PM
May 10

He’s a bit mangy now, but he’s still sitting on a chair in my bedroom next to my equally ratty Raggedy Ann doll. But my favorite book was the Kipling stories like The Elephant’s Child and Rikki-Tikki-Tavi.

Permanut

(5,745 posts)
26. The Walrus and the Carpenter..
Fri May 10, 2024, 12:49 PM
May 10

My favorite poem. Had it memorized years ago; not sure I could recite it now.

cayugafalls

(5,674 posts)
50. Tweedle Dum and Tweedle Dee are the origin of the Walrus, according to Paul McCartney...lol
Fri May 10, 2024, 03:47 PM
May 10

"The time has come," the Walrus said,
"To talk of many things:
Of shoes—and ships—and sealing-wax—
Of cabbages—and kings—
And why the sea is boiling hot—
And whether pigs have wings."

CTyankee

(63,942 posts)
6. Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. Because she had dark hair like mine and I thought all princess should not always be a
Fri May 10, 2024, 12:12 PM
May 10

a blonde with golden hair.

CTyankee

(63,942 posts)
27. Thanks. I feel ancient since a lot of this discussion is about fairy tale stuff after the creaton of the Internet. I had
Fri May 10, 2024, 12:55 PM
May 10

books....just books. And movies of fairy tales, bless Disney, who weren't around when I was given fairy tale books.

debm55

(25,819 posts)
65. TY CTyankee, I had the movies. but my first love were the actual books I could feel and smell. Also each steel mill town
Fri May 10, 2024, 09:44 PM
May 10

along the river had an Andrew Carnegie Library were books could be taken for a week.

Harker

(14,160 posts)
9. "The Story of Ferdinand" and "Make Way for Ducklings" were my early favorites.
Fri May 10, 2024, 12:20 PM
May 10

I still smile thinking of how they helped shape my personality.

debm55

(25,819 posts)
22. Oh you must have been very young, I remember Ferdinand the bull and the little ducklings. Ty, Harker.
Fri May 10, 2024, 12:40 PM
May 10

Lunabell

(6,152 posts)
15. The Mrs. Pigglewiggle books.
Fri May 10, 2024, 12:27 PM
May 10

Beverly Cleary books with Henry Huggins and Ramona. Then, later, all of the Little House on the Prairie books.

Permanut

(5,745 posts)
24. Beverly Cleary has a K-4 school named after her in Portland, Oregon .
Fri May 10, 2024, 12:45 PM
May 10

The setting for her Ramona Quimby books.

Thunderbeast

(3,433 posts)
52. Henry Huggins was MY favorite book
Fri May 10, 2024, 03:56 PM
May 10

Growing up in Portland, he was a kid I could relate to. The bronze statues of Henry, Ramona, and Beazus at US Grant Park are precious!

My wife was a school librarian at Alameda.... located on Klickitat Street.

woodsprite

(11,950 posts)
16. Charlotte's Web.
Fri May 10, 2024, 12:28 PM
May 10

To this day, "Charlottes" are the only kind of spider I'll tolerate, but they still have to be outside the house.

debm55

(25,819 posts)
28. Ty woodsprite. I always felt sorry for Charlotte. I know about the spider thing. I was outside the other day and a
Fri May 10, 2024, 12:55 PM
May 10

spider was on me. Freaked me out.

PJMcK

(22,118 posts)
59. I was 7 or 8 when I read it
Fri May 10, 2024, 06:15 PM
May 10

I remember I cried when Charlotte died.

When my son was young, I read CW to him and I realized something. At the end of the book, Charlotte’s babies hatch shouting, “Salutations!” How did Charlotte’s eggs get fertilized? Hmm.

SKKY

(11,851 posts)
25. Charlotte's Web. It was also the first movie I ever saw in a theater....
Fri May 10, 2024, 12:48 PM
May 10

...so it has sentimental value.

Different Drummer

(7,699 posts)
29. If I had to pick one, it would be "Go, Dog, Go" by P.D. Eastman.
Fri May 10, 2024, 12:56 PM
May 10

I also liked all of the Dr. Seuss books, My Puppy and Me, and Mike Mulligan and His Steam Shovel.

debm55

(25,819 posts)
33. Ty Different Drummer. Loved all of Dr, Seuss. books. Luckily as a child, we had a large Carnegie Library to get all the
Fri May 10, 2024, 01:04 PM
May 10

books I wanted.

Different Drummer

(7,699 posts)
38. One Dr. Seuss book that I was recently made aware of the existence of is...
Fri May 10, 2024, 01:26 PM
May 10
On Beyond Zebra!. I heard a description of it and immediately wanted it as an e-book since those are the only kind I get now. However, it appears that it's only available as a paperback and a hardcover and the price of both is prohibitively high so, fortunately, I found a YouTube video of someone reading it.

malthaussen

(17,256 posts)
110. Not sure what it says about my personality, but Mole was my favorite...
Sat May 11, 2024, 05:00 PM
May 11

... I still choke up a little when he and Rat go back to Mole's old house.

-- Mal

AllaN01Bear

(19,095 posts)
37. i read Charlotte's Web as an adult and the cartoon much later . im not a veggin but i have great respect
Fri May 10, 2024, 01:17 PM
May 10

for where our food comes from.

3catwoman3

(24,187 posts)
45. A Wrinkle In Time by Madeline L'Engle.
Fri May 10, 2024, 02:51 PM
May 10

I’ve not been able to make myself watch any of the movie versions because I know I’ll be disappointed. I have such vivid mental images from what my imagination decided the characters should look like and I’ve seen short clips - the actors cast look nothing like my mental renderings, and in many cases, nothing like the author’s descriptions.

debm55

(25,819 posts)
102. Ty Coventina. I really enjoyed Richard Scarry's books. I see it was a Golden Book with the gold metallic binding
Sat May 11, 2024, 12:11 PM
May 11

Conjuay

(1,461 posts)
48. My aunt in England
Fri May 10, 2024, 03:21 PM
May 10

Sent me, "Rupert" a book starring a bear/ child and his many adventures. It was sort of a cross between a comic book and a graphic novel. It contained beautiful water color prints.

yellowdogintexas

(22,300 posts)
49. I am SO old! Tom Sawyer was definitely one of my favorites
Fri May 10, 2024, 03:22 PM
May 10

I read it every summer, along with Hans Brinker and the Silver Skates.

We had the Childcraft books and the poetry and fiction books were my favorite. I found a full set of them at Half Price when my daughter was in Kindergarten and got them for her. SHe loved them too and now she has them for her daughter. (my sister took mine for her daughter who is 8 years older than the rest of our kids)

However I was addicted to Bobbsey Twins and Nancy Drew, and these were the original ones, not the dumb downed ones. I loved Dr Seuss too.

I also had a a Brer Rabbit book, based on Song of the South!!! This was back in the 50s. It had the art used in the movie and all the stories which I guess were from the source material for the movie. I think it was called "Tales of Uncle Remus". It was a beautiful book and the stories were lots of fun. Of course now you couldn't find one outside of a yard sale, but 6 year old me would not have known the difference. It eventually fell apart.

Almost forgot Babar!!! I was so disappointed when my daughter did not really like Babar!!!

Did anyone ever have The Bumper Book? That was my favorite in my early learning to read years. Lots of stories, poetry. I would love to find a copy of it for my granddaughter. That is another on my sister absconded with. If you can find one it is atrociously expensive.

debm55

(25,819 posts)
105. Ty yellowdogintexas, Wonderful choices. I hate to say it , but I didn't like Barbar either. For some reason it
Sat May 11, 2024, 12:17 PM
May 11

frightened me.

debm55

(25,819 posts)
118. My class read this. I know they did a movie of the book, but nothing beats a book, so I didn't see it.
Sat May 11, 2024, 08:52 PM
May 11

debm55

(25,819 posts)
122. Loved those books. About 15 years ago. Kohl's would have classic children's books with a stuffy. I have Horton Hears a
Sat May 11, 2024, 09:11 PM
May 11

Who and the elephant stuffy for my grandchildren. My son is mentally challenged because of a car accident. So I wrapped them all up and donated to a Day Care .

Niagara

(7,825 posts)
56. I still have or have replacements for some of the books I have listed.
Fri May 10, 2024, 05:22 PM
May 10

Anne of Green Gables by L.M. Montgomery


The Adventures of Tom Sawyer by Mark Twain


A Horse Came Running by Meindert DeJong


The Little House on the Prairie series by Laura Ingalls Wilder


Where the Red Fern Grows by Wilson Rawls


There's a short story called Another Part of the House that's not exactly for children, but told through a child's eyes


I'm still guilty of reading Judy Blume books when I get the chance




Jilly_in_VA

(10,061 posts)
57. I'm old, so...
Fri May 10, 2024, 05:39 PM
May 10

Little Women

The Secret Garden

ALL the Betsy-Tacy books (yes, I grew up in the midwest)

The Little House books (before the evangelicals got hold of them)

All the Anne of Green Gables Books

Jean and the Good Cat Jupie

debm55

(25,819 posts)
69. HAHAHHAHAHHAHAHAH "see Jane run. Run Jane run. See Spot run Run Spot run,-----Really a whole generation of kids
Fri May 10, 2024, 10:05 PM
May 10

learned to read from them . Not all, but a majority of kids did.

PJMcK

(22,118 posts)
60. The Boxcar Children
Fri May 10, 2024, 06:23 PM
May 10

It was a series of adventures about some orphans who lived in an abandoned train car. I don’t remember anything else except that devoured them.

debm55

(25,819 posts)
68. Ty PJMcK I remember them. As a classroom teacher Scholastic would a lot each teacher a selection. I picked the Boxcar
Fri May 10, 2024, 09:59 PM
May 10

Children and it came in a boxcar storage box.

canuckledragger

(1,671 posts)
61. Where the wild things are
Fri May 10, 2024, 09:07 PM
May 10

Being the black sheep and whipping boy of my family, I identified with kid in the book being sent to his room just for being who he is, then taking the attitude of "If they're going to treat me like a wild thing, might as well be one!"

debm55

(25,819 posts)
67. Oh, canuckledragger. you were not a wild thing. You were a child finding his way as all children must do to grow. I am
Fri May 10, 2024, 09:55 PM
May 10

I was/ am the black sheep in my abusive family because I left at 18, never to return to a house of people who were jealous of my smarts and talents. We deserved better. Love, Debbie

Jeebo

(2,045 posts)
62. The Black Stallion novels, by Walter Farley
Fri May 10, 2024, 09:20 PM
May 10

When I was in ... oh, it must have been about the fifth grade, our teacher read the first Black Stallion novel to us in class, a chapter or two at a time. That was about 1960. All of the kids in the class really enjoyed it, and I am sure I was not the only kid who was reading more Black Stallion novels on my own after that. I think the teacher was doing that to get us kids into the reading habit, and that was certainly the effect it had on me. For a while I was reading every Black Stallion novel that came out, and I think Walter Farley was still writing them when I finally overdosed on them and started reading something else. That was one of the things that got me started reading. I also enjoyed that movie some years back with Terri Garr, Kelly Reno and Mickey Rooney.

-- Ron

debm55

(25,819 posts)
66. Thank you Jeebo, During my teaching days, I read the first Black Stallion to my class. I had read the series as a child.
Fri May 10, 2024, 09:48 PM
May 10

Jeebo

(2,045 posts)
75. It's really interesting that you did that, too.
Sat May 11, 2024, 12:16 AM
May 11

Was it something that the publisher was encouraging elementary school teachers to do? Or is it just a coincidence that you and my fifth grade (I think it was fifth grade) teacher also read that same novel to her class? Coincidences do happen sometimes in the real world ...

-- Ron

Brother Buzz

(36,525 posts)
72. Mike Mulligan And His Steam Shovel
Fri May 10, 2024, 10:59 PM
May 10


Steam engines were already gone in my childhood, but I still called road rollers steam rollers. Same with using steam shovels. I really liked the ending where Mary Anne got repurposed rather than getting relegated to the scrap heap.

I_UndergroundPanther

(12,524 posts)
76. I have 3
Sat May 11, 2024, 12:26 AM
May 11

Glimpses into Pet land
Silver Pennies
The Phantom Tollbooth

If I added 3 more would be :
Pyewacket
Saturday the 12th of October
The Silent Mieow

Lastly
When Cats Were Green

3catwoman3

(24,187 posts)
81. The Silent Miaow is one of the best books ever.
Sat May 11, 2024, 07:31 AM
May 11

I first read it in my mid-twenties. A friend gave it to me as a gift.

I was captivated immediately by the story and the charming photographs, and have read it many, many times. It didn’t seem at all odd that the story was being told in the first person by a cat speaking English.

I even named a cat Cica after the main character kitty. Always had to explain that it was pronounced Tsi-tsa (Hungarian for “kitten,” IIRC).

debm55

(25,819 posts)
91. TY I_UndergroundPanther. Freat choices. My 6th grade class had the Phantom Tollbooth as in a play version in their
Sat May 11, 2024, 11:46 AM
May 11

Literature book and we acted it out. Fun.

debm55

(25,819 posts)
89. TY jmowreader. We had the Encyclopedia you would buy weakly at the A&P they were full of pictures. Question for you --
Sat May 11, 2024, 11:40 AM
May 11

did you go into engineering?

jmowreader

(50,627 posts)
107. Before I graduated from high school I wanted to be an electrical engineer
Sat May 11, 2024, 01:46 PM
May 11

Then I joined the Army and did Army things. Naturally, because I am a nerd I got into computers and became a computer nerd. When the Desktop Publishing revolution came around I thought that was cool and bought a copy of Letraset’s Ready, Set, Go! page layout software, a copy of Adobe Illustrator and a PostScript laser printer and “learned by doing” - there is SO much design in Berlin, so when I saw something cool in my journeys I’d go home and figure our how to do it myself. I knew sound so I joined the Brigade’s theater club as a sound designer and talked the makeup designer into teaching me to do makeup. I was already taking good pictures, I learned that on the high school paper and on annual staff.

I don’t get to invent the next big thing the teens are shoving in their pockets, but I’m doing okay.

electric_blue68

(15,073 posts)
80. Even perhaps before or concurrent w Dr Suess: Harold and The Purple Crayon!
Sat May 11, 2024, 04:44 AM
May 11

Dr Suess - The Birthday Book

Have to think on a full blown book

But I do have a memory of looking in the (school?) Library for "Tip" (the dog), after the first Dick & Jane book.

debm55

(25,819 posts)
88. Did you notice you could look at the illustrations for the Dick and Jane books. As the series went along, there was less
Sat May 11, 2024, 11:36 AM
May 11

and less illustrations .

MIGuy

(15 posts)
83. Paddle to the Sea
Sat May 11, 2024, 09:00 AM
May 11

The first full story I understood and remembered. The beautiful illustrations helped.

debm55

(25,819 posts)
86. Thank you MIGuy. I remember the illustrations of books I read also. And they do help with understanding.
Sat May 11, 2024, 11:32 AM
May 11

Tree Lady

(11,554 posts)
84. Little House on the Prairie
Sat May 11, 2024, 11:15 AM
May 11

(the Long Winter) I lived in a area of no snow and mild winter so reading about being snowed in for months and barely surviving was exciting as a kid.

I was always curious about living in the days of no electricity and other modern appliances.

justaprogressive

(2,287 posts)
92. Ferdinand (the Bull)
Sat May 11, 2024, 11:48 AM
May 11

smart mom (of military background) made me a pacifist.

should be required reading in kindergarten...

debm55

(25,819 posts)
119. TY MiHale. They must have been really good to reread. I still read "All Creatures Great and Small" series.
Sat May 11, 2024, 08:55 PM
May 11

Alliepoo

(2,247 posts)
108. The first fave book I can recall is
Sat May 11, 2024, 02:00 PM
May 11

365 Bedtime Stories. It had a one page story for every day of the year. It took place on What-a-Jolly-Street and one of the main characters was a kindly older lady named Miss Apricot. The stories involved the kids and families that lived on the street. There was a map printed inside the cover that showed where everyone lived, the stores and shops and the school. My parents read this book to my sis and I every night. We loved it. When I got my first desktop computer I searched until I found a copy of this book and I bought it. I’ve been an avid reader all my life. I also loved the Arrow Book Club in grade school where we could order books through school. I found a couple of fondly remembered favorites and ordered those online, too!

petronius

(26,616 posts)
111. The Wump World, by Bill Peet. (But I think the Veleveteen Rabbit was the first
Sat May 11, 2024, 07:04 PM
May 11

book that made me cry...)

Aristus

(66,590 posts)
124. "At the far edge of town where the grickle-grass grows,
Sat May 11, 2024, 09:24 PM
May 11

and the wind smells slow and sour when it blows/and no birds ever sing excepting old crows/is the Street of the Lifted Lorax…”

RazorbackExpat

(67 posts)
126. I had LOTS of them
Sun May 12, 2024, 09:39 AM
May 12

Anything by Dr. Seuss, anything by A.A.Milne. the Boxcar Children series (especially The Lighthouse Mystery), Peanuts comic books, virtually anything my teachers read to us after lunch in elementary school (especially Brighty of the Grand Canyon), Golden Book Encyclopedia (published in 1960), Golden Book Geography series (also 1960), Book of presidential stickers (ended with Johnson), Children's Encyclopedia of US History (ended with the assassination of Martin Luther King). Golden Magazine, Boys' Life, The Search for Planet X (when Pluto was still a planet), Runaway Slave: The Story of Harriet Tubman, The History of Arkansas (school textbook, ended with the election of Governor Orville Faubus. no mention of Little Rock). That textbook was already 15 years out of date by the time I got it, but I really loved to read about the Caddo and Quapaw Indians, the legend of Petit Jean, the De Soto and De Tonti expeditions, Arkansas Post and the Brooks-Baxter War, and places that were outside of my sheltered world

TomSlick

(11,185 posts)
128. Welcome to DU!
Sun May 12, 2024, 06:28 PM
May 12

Your references to the Brooks-Baxter war and Petit Jean establish your bona fides as an Arkie.

RazorbackExpat

(67 posts)
129. I also remember the 'Game of the Century"
Sun May 12, 2024, 07:42 PM
May 12

Arkansas versus Texas, December 1969. Richard Nixon attended that game. Final score: Texas 15, Arkansas 14

RazorbackExpat

(67 posts)
131. Another 1 - point game
Sun May 12, 2024, 08:32 PM
May 12

But this time in the Hogs' favor It must have been incredible, watching it live.

My favorite Hawg moment was listening to them win the NCAA tournament in 1994, then arriving at the Fayetteville airport later and seeing that championship banner

TomSlick

(11,185 posts)
141. I have been called Tom Slick for years - at least since the time of Slick Willie.
Mon May 13, 2024, 06:59 PM
May 13

It's a bonus that I watched the cartoon as a kid.

dameatball

(7,411 posts)
134. From my elementary school library, "The Black Stone Knife"
Mon May 13, 2024, 09:23 AM
May 13

About a Kiowa boy and his friends who journey to follow summer and have adventures. I bought a copy for my grandkids but I think only one of them read it.

electric_blue68

(15,073 posts)
135. Harold and The Purple Crayon! Dr Suess's Happy Birthday to You book!
Mon May 13, 2024, 11:43 AM
May 13

That was after the whole Dick and Jane series! 😄 I have a memory of looking in a library for "Tip".

Black Beauty may have been one of my first long read books.

Then I discovered a SF novel my dad had when I was 10, and never looked back! 😁

OldBaldy1701E

(5,252 posts)
138. 'The Hardy Boys', 'The Three Investigators', and 'Tom Swift'.
Mon May 13, 2024, 12:45 PM
May 13

Oh, and 'Jaws' (read at age ten), Bram Stoker's 'Dracula' (age 9), 'Peter and Wendy' (age 8), The Star Trek novels by James Blish, 'Barsoom' and 'Tarzan' by E.G. Burroughs, as well as a massive assortment of horror/mystery/crime books.

I was a voracious reader when I was a child.

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