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What books will your child have read by the end of eighth grade?


Caroline
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How about 5 from each time period (and I'm not even sure I can do that, LOL):

 

The Mysterious Visitor: Stories of the Prophet Elijah

Nina Jaffe

 

Gilgamesh

 

The Golden Goblet

Eloise Jarvis McGraw

 

To Ride the God's Own Stallion

Diane Lee Wilson

 

Ishtar and Tammuz: A Babylonian Book of the Seasons

Christopher Moore

 

The Seven Wise Princesses

Wafa' Tarnowska (VERY good Persian tale!)

 

The Eagle of the Ninth

Rosemary Sutcliff

 

Tales of a Chinese Grandmother

Francis Carpenter

 

The Bronze Bow

Elizabeth George Spear

 

The Silver Branch

Rosemary Sutcliff

 

Black Ships Before Troy

Rosemary Sutcliff

 

The Enchanted Caribou

Elizabeth Cleaver (I believe ds really liked this one, too)

 

The Story of Comock the Eskimo

Robert Flaherty (VERY good)

 

Tristan and Iseult

Rosemary Sutcliff

 

Archimedes and the Door of Science

Jeanne Bendick

 

D'Aulaire's Book of Greek Myths

 

Troubadour's Storybag: Musical Folktales of the World

Norma J. Livo

 

Plutarch's "Lives"

 

Augustus Caesar's World

 

The Story of Masada: Retold for Young Readers

Gerald Gottlieb (VERY GOOD! about the excavation of Masada during the 1960's)

 

As you see, that's the best I've been able to do in culling down just my ancients list, so I'll stop now, LOL.....

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If you had to pick the 5 most important books you want your child to read by the end of eighth grade, what would they be and why?

 

Lord Of The Rings trilogy by Tolkien

 

Chronicles of Narnia, CS Lewis

 

Little Britches, Man Of The Family series, Ralph Moody

 

Little Women, Alcott (my dd only)

 

Illiad/Odyssey, Homer

Know What You Believe, Paul Little

 

I know this is more than 5. I could list more but I'll stop here. Why these books? Classics, thought-provoking.

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And here are my picks for medieval, I guess:

 

Boy’s King Arthur or King Arthur and his Knights of the Round Table, both by Sidney Lanier r

 

Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, Tolkien

 

Anna of Byzantium, Tracy Barrett

 

The Lantern Bearers, Sutcliff

 

Foxes’ Book of Martyrs

 

Ivanhoe (re: persecution of the Jews) – simpler version in great illustrated classics series adapted by Malvina G. Vogel, also series on tape [PBS?](but adult nature to theme in video set, although this zoomed right over my son’s head)

 

The Knights of the Golden Table (re: Vladimir, Grand Duke of Kiev), E.M. Almedingen (who also has out several children’s books on ancient Russia)

 

The Beduin’s Gazelle, Frances Temple

 

The Samurai’s Tale, Erik Christian Hanguard

 

The White Stag, Kate Seredy

 

Beowulf (I really don’t like the Rabseman version we found; couldn’t find Nye; easier versions: By His Own Might: The Battles of Beowulf, Dorothy Hosford; Beowulf, Sutcliff; Beowulf the Warrior, Ian Serraillier)

 

The Shining Company, Sutcliff

 

Song of Roland, Merriam Sherwood (gory!)

 

The Adventures of Robin Hood, Roger L. Green

 

Sword Song, R. Sutcliff

 

Myths of the Norsemen, Roger Lancelyn Green

 

The Striped Ships, McGraw

 

Dante’s Inferno, Pinsky (just the recommended Canto)

 

A Proud Taste for Scarlet and Minever (re: Eleanor)

 

Around the World in a Hundred Years

 

Macbeth, Oxford student ed.

 

Mary, Bloody Mary

 

Prologue to the Canterbury Tales, Coghill

 

Canterbury Tales, MacCaughrean (simpler, but some bawdiness)

 

I see I didn't do much better at wheedling those down, LOL.....

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I'm going out on a limb here.

 

My oldest only just started reading. However, I don't think that I could list 5 specific books that I want her to read by 8th grade, except the Bible.

 

Sure, I *want* her to read lots and lots of books, including many of those already listed. However, I can't think of any specific book (with the exception of the Bible) so essential to her education that it would gain such elite status. I think that reading a wide variety of good books is more important than reading any specific book.

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My oldest hser is in 1st, so this is a long range plan...

 

Little House series (I couldn't pick just one book)

Chronicles of Narnia (ditto)

Thornton Burgess animal books

Harry Potter

Nancy Drew/Hardy Boys

 

I didn't pick classics (heck, I admit that Nancy and the boys are twaddle) but these are the books that I enjoyed a lot as a kid. I do want the kids to read the classics in highschool and, if they're ready, maybe in middle school. But I want them to have time to enjoy kids' books too, and there's no better time to do that than when you are a kid.

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My dd is almost 14, and I am glad we have already covered:

Lord of the Rings (with Literary lessons form Lord of the Rings)

Narnia Series

Treasure island

Crystal Cave by Mary Stewart

The Hobbit

Ann of Green Gables

She is on the last book of the Clan of the Cave Bear series- these have really spoken to her

Harry Potter

Lots and lots of others. I am glad we have covered lots of children's classics. She is now ready for more adult books, but at the same time, she is not ready for many of the "classic" adult books, or even highschool books, like 1984. She needs a bit more maturity.

She will be reading Mists of Avalon, Tess of the D'Urbavilles, Walden, Austen and Dickens, Galileo's daughter, maybe some Dostoyevsky, some classic science fiction like Farenheit 451, maybe a DHLawrence, before I have finished with her, but we have a few years to go, I hope.

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My son (almost 14, too) enjoyed the Lord of the Rings, Treasure Island, Robinson Crusoe, some Henty books (which we read aloud), some Alcott! (yay!)...of course, Harry Potter and Narnia...I've got some car books for our trip to Utah (Rocky Mountain district select hockey camp coming up next week)--Great Gatsby and the Nick Adams stories (a good intro to Hemingway). He's also enjoyed MacBeth (more so than the comedies...)

 

We'll jump into more of the classics as we continue highschool--Dickens for sure...I'm not too sure about DH Lawrence, though...which one would you use?

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We'll jump into more of the classics as we continue highschool--Dickens for sure...I'm not too sure about DH Lawrence, though...which one would you use?

 

Good question, I am not sure, I just went through a DH Lawrence phase about 10 years ago. It may not be appropriate, but then, I did Tess of the D'Urbavilles in grade 10 and that's all about a rape- I am not too worried about that. I loved Lawrence. I will have to reread. (and there is a rape scene in the first Clan of the Cave Bear book, too, and goodness knows what in the rest- its so long since I read them) before I choose one for dd. There isone set in Australia, but its not his most popular.

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*By the five most important books

 

~Roll of Thunder Hear My Cry

~Tom Sawyer

~Children's Homer

~Orestia

~The Giver*

~The Watsons Go to Birmingham

~A View From Saturday

~Flowers for Algernon

~A Tree Grows in Brooklyn

~Beowulf

~To Kill a Mockingbird*

~Of Mice and Men

~A Midsummer Night's Dream*

~The Tempest

~The Pearl

~The Prince and the Pauper

~All Quiet on the Western Front

~Black Boy

~Romeo and Juliet

~I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings

~Lord of the Flies*

~One Flew overs the Cuckoo's Nest

~A House on Mango Street

~The Chosen

~Great Expectations

~Night

~Animal Farm

~The Odyssey*

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