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Way too many options - please help me narrow down


rookie
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dd13 grade 7 is studying Middle Ages. I have ordered and stocked every book ever written on the subject (almost). It's a bit much. But they all look so good that I can't send any back to the library.

 

However, I do think I should choose a core set of "Must Reads" for her.

 

Please share the books you would assign, without fail, for your middle schooler to read about the Middle Ages.

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Here are some of our successes:

 

Beowulf: A New Telling - Nye

 

Cathedral, Castle - Macaulay (He has other titles that you might also consider.)

 

Saint George and the Dragon - Hodges

 

Joan of Arc - Stanley (This author has lots of good titles.)

 

Around the World in a Hundred Years - Fritz

 

Starry Messenger - Sis

 

Tales from Shakespeare - Williams

 

The Shakespeare Stealer - Blackwood

 

Ramsay Scallop - Temple

 

A Single Shard - Park

 

Regards,

Kareni

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Please share the books you would assign, without fail, for your middle schooler to read about the Middle Ages.

Jacques Le Goff is one of the highest quality medievalists of our times and I've found his books, both as a student and as a professor, to be an INVALUABLE resource.

 

BUT, those books are a bit hard for a middle schooler. You would have to read them in advance, pick selections and then work through them with your daughter. However, if you do wish to uplift your studies to a whole new level, I can't recommend him enough. I watered down a LOT of Le Goff for my girls over the years, or read through parts of his works with them - he was our main History supplement. He'll be more interesting to you than to her as his writing is quite adult-level, but you'll find a way to communicate it to your daughter too.

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Thanks to all who have shared book ideas as I've needed to start a list as well :)

 

Luckymama, here is my booklist from when I was teaching the MA to 3rd, 6th, and 8th graders. (Ignore the asterisks: they were simply notes to myself that one of my kids had already read those titles. I dropped the Winston Churchill books b/c I thought they were not appropriate for middle school ages.) This is my MA study put together as a Catholic.

 

If you would like the break down of titles by time period and reading level, if you send me your email address by pm, I can email an excel spreadsheet.

 

Constantine by Frank Slaughter

In This Sign You Shall Conquer

Byzantium-spine Time Life Books

Didache:History of the Church

A Little Story of World History- by Gombrich

The Birth of Britian--spine by Winston Churchill

The New World--by Winston Churchill

Kings and Things by Marshall

Sister Wendy's Story of Painting

Our Island Story by Marshall

How the Catholic Church Built Western Civilization--Woods

Timelines of World History --by DK books

The Early Middle Ages by Teaching Company

Popes and the Papacy by Teaching Company

The History Of Christianity in the Reformation Era by Teaching Company

Augustine, St and his Search for Faith by Lomask

Restless Flame: Story of St. Augustine by Louis de Wohl

Patrick, Patron Saint of Ireland--LIBRARY by de Paola

Between the Forest and the Hills by Ann Lawrence

Atilla the Hun by Louis de Wohl

*Citadel of God, St Benedict by Louis de Wohl

*Fingals Quest by Madeleine Polland

Parzival (King Arthur) by Katherine Paterson

Sword and the circle (King Arthur) by Rosemary Sutcliff

Arabian nights by Andrew Lang

March of Islam---Time Life Books

Bede, St--online from Ambleside online

Charlemagne--A Horizon Carvavel book

Namesake (King Alfred the Great) by C. Walter Hodges

Knights Templar-EWTN radio

*Crusades by Harold Lamb

Castle by David Macaulay and Eyewitness Books

Dominic, St by Windeatt

Joyful Beggar (St Francis of Assisi) by Louis de Wohl

Magna Charta by James Daugherty

Merry Adventures of Robin Hood by Pyle

Cathedral by David Macaulay

Mongol horde--Time Life Books

Otto oF the Silver Hand by Pyle

Adventures of Robin Hood by Roger L. Green, another by Ann Mc Govern

Quiet Light (Thomas Aquinas) by Louis de Wohl

Adam of the Road byElizabeth Gray

Black Death

Lay Siege to Heaven (Catherine of Siena) by Louis de Wohl

Black Arrow by Robert Louis Stevenson

Men of Iron by Pyle

Trumpeter of Krakow byEric kelly

Joan of Arc: one by Johnston and Mars, other by Mark Twain

Michelangelo by Peck

Twice Queen of France:Anne of Brittany byMildred Butler

Thomas More----library movie

The Golden Thread: St. Ignatius Loyola by Louis de Wohl

Spanish Inquisition--EWTN radio

The World in 1492 by Jean Fritz and Katherine Paterson

*Pedro’s Journal by Conrad

*Set all Afire (Francis Xavier) by Louis de Wohl

Works of Lamb by Charles and Mary Lamb, selected Shakespeare for older

*Door in the Wall by Marguerite de Angeli

*Mission to Cathay (Fr. Ricci, mainland China) by Polland

A Trumpet Sounds by Henry Garnett

Philadelphia Catholic in King James’s Court by Kennedy

Red Hugh, Prince of Donegal by Allen French

Edmund Campion by Evelyn Waugh

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Jacques Le Goff is one of the highest quality medievalists of our times and I've found his books, both as a student and as a professor, to be an INVALUABLE resource.

 

BUT, those books are a bit hard for a middle schooler. You would have to read them in advance, pick selections and then work through them with your daughter. However, if you do wish to uplift your studies to a whole new level, I can't recommend him enough. I watered down a LOT of Le Goff for my girls over the years, or read through parts of his works with them - he was our main History supplement. He'll be more interesting to you than to her as his writing is quite adult-level, but you'll find a way to communicate it to your daughter too.

 

My dd is studying the midde ages next year. When I looked up books by this author there were quite a few. Are there any specific titles you recommend above others - or any that are a better starting point than others?

 

Thanks!

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