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milk

Lifer
Sep 21, 2022
1,121
2,899
Japan
My boys are 5 and 3 and of course I read a lot of books to them. I have to say that most books are so-so. My biggest complaint is that most authors of children’s books have something in mind that they want kids to learn. I find that tendentiousness pretty annoying. It keeps the work from being “art” IMHO. Few books transcend the genre to become truly memorable and worthy of admiration. One author that I think wrote really sublime books was Arnold Lobel. He authored and illustrated Toad and Frog as Well as Owl at Home. Others here might suggest some of their favorite children’s books that they think we should be reading to our kids?
Owl making “tear-water tea”:
Owl-at-Home6.jpg

Owl talking to the moon:
Owl-at-Home8.jpg

Owl wondering why he cannot be both upstairs and downstairs at the same time:
childrens1.jpg
 

Indygrap

Starting to Get Obsessed
Oct 18, 2022
258
638
New Orleans, LA
Winnie the Pooh, Where the Wild Things Are, most anything from Dr. Seuss are ones that I remember my parents reading to me. The Hobbit & The Princess Bride could be fun as they get a little older(especially if you’re good with doing the characters voices). If they stick with reading on their own, Neil Gaiman writes some engaging YA books that often get overlooked because his main works are geared towards adults. Enjoy the time with your children. Believe it or not, this type of thing sticks with them.
 
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milk

Lifer
Sep 21, 2022
1,121
2,899
Japan
Back when my kids were young enough to read to nightly, here were a few of the favorites:

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We have both the Seuss and the Scarry. I respect that Seuss. It's unique and unforgettable. There isn't a replacement for Suess as far as words go or really his visual ideas either. I think Scarry is in that category of sublime. There's something about Scarry. He created worlds unto themselves. They seem endless.
Two that i remember my mom reading to me are, Where the Wild Things Are and In The Night Kitchen

Where the Wild Things Are is a favorite of mine since I was a kid and my kids love it. One line that they can get out of their heads is, "We'll eat you up we love you so!" I think I have it right. It's a great line that sticks with you. The illustrations are so incredible. I have to say also that I loved the movie even though its connection to the book is almost thin. It's connected but it's not the same thing and not for the same age group. But it got into me, perhaps because it delved more deeply into the loneliness of those scary feelings children can have.
 

milk

Lifer
Sep 21, 2022
1,121
2,899
Japan
The Little Prince is timeless, with a decent message adults need to review and remember every now and again.

Castle in the Attic and Indian in the Cupboard are also decent reads with toys coming to life.
I'm waiting a little bit on The Little Prince. It's great. I'm thinking to wait another couple of years.
 
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n_irwin

Can't Leave
Apr 15, 2022
347
1,691
Texas, USA
I’ll second Chris Van Dusen and Jon Klassen. Circus Ship is a fun read. So is The Day the Crayons Quit, by Drew Daywalt. When I was growing up, my favorite was Harold and the Purple Crayon. It’s been fun to enjoy it with my kids.
 
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Kobold

Lifer
Feb 2, 2022
1,447
5,138
Maryland
Shel Silverstein is read a lot to my boys and Margret Wise Brown. Brown’s books are actually really weird at times. She was a character. Even her death was weird.

“In 1952, Brown met James Stillman 'Pebble' Rockefeller Jr. at a party, and they became engaged. Later that year, while on a book tour in Nice, France, she died at 42 of an embolism, shortly after surgery for a ruptured appendix. Kicking up her leg to show her nurses how well she was feeling caused a blood clot that had formed in her leg to dislodge and travel to her heart.“
 
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Pooh-Bah

Can't Leave
Apr 21, 2023
437
4,490
32
Central Maryland
I'll add another vote of quality to Beatrix Potter. And make a pair of recommendations.

E B White - Charlotte's Web, Stuart Little, Trumpet of the Swan. I've very fond memories of ma reading these to me as a tiny child. May be another year or two off from these.

Childcraft - My dad had the 1964 set when he was a boy, and I greatly enjoyed the fairy tales from volume 4(?) whenever we were visiting grandma (where the books remained in the basement).
My favorites were "Salt" and "The Old Woman and Her Pig".