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Books for Children
These are some books that I recommend for kids but that are also interesting for adults. Which makes it much more fun to read together with them. Beyond the first few days, when they are first learning to read at the See Dick, see Jane level, I dont think it is necessary to give kids stupid, dumbed-down books. Parents often say, Oh, this is too difficult. There are too many words he wouldnt know. It would be beyond him. But childrens reading material should be beyond them. Thats how they stretch their minds and learn new things. (The same, of course, applies to adults.) Actually, kids are learning new words and phrases all the time, sometimes by asking the meaning but usually by figuring it out from the context. Reading good books, particularly books about how people lived in other times and places, gives them richer and larger contexts. In times past most children preferred such books. They didnt have to be assigned to read them. More likely they read them on the sly, when they were supposed to be studying. I have divided the books into three levels of difficulty, but this is obviously only a rough guide. The grade school books are not solely for young children, and an adventurous child will easily progress to some of the more advanced ones. Ive known ten-year-olds of no more than average intelligence who have reread Little Women or Tolkiens Ring trilogy several times. Also, there are of course retellings at various levels. You can find an edition of Gullivers Travels suitable for eight-year-olds of the sort that consists mostly of illustrations, and a rather different one for young teenagers that is an abridged and somewhat simplified version of the original text. By the late teens anyone who is not actually brain-damaged should be able to read almost any work of fiction without any such simplification. If they cant, dont blame me, blame their education (and do something about it).
Middle School Level:
High School Level:
I have limited this list mainly to fiction. There are far too many nonfiction books about history, science, etc., to go into here. But I will mention that Isaac Asimov wrote literally hundreds of interesting books of science fiction and science fact. Many are written specifically for children, but his style is so lucid that most of his adult-level books should also be quite understandable by kids, certainly by the early teens.
No copyright.
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