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I've followed some of the threads about Good Books vs Great Books. Some have rightly said that literature for Good Books does not cease in a particular century or decade. My knowledge of children's lit is severely limited when it comes to Modern times, and I was hoping that some of you would share your knowledge and give me some more recent titles to look into for my dc. I am purposely not defining modern as a specific period, so if you consider it a modern work, go ahead and list it.

 

TIA!

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I've been working on compiling a list. :001_smile: It's constantly shifting, though, so who knows what I'll wind up actually assigning.

 

I'm not sure how you want to define "modern" in this thread. That Senior "good books" list stops at World War I. I have trouble considering books written before my mother was born to be "modern," so I'm showing you the section of my list that has been written since WWII.

 

SECOND GRADE

The Water Horse. Dick King-Smith. 1990.

All of a Kind Family. Sidney Taylor. 1951.

Charlotte’s Web. E.B. White. 1952.

The Daydreamer. Ian McEwan. 1994.

Nim’s Island. Wendy Orr. 2000.

The Door in the Wall. Marguerite di Angeli. 1949.

Where the Mountain Meets the Moon. Grace Lin. 2010.

A Lion to Guard Us. Clyde Robert Bulla. 1981.

Ramona Quimby, Age 8. Beverly Cleary. 1981.

Sarah, Plain and Tall. Patricia MacLachlan. 1985.

In the Year of the Boar and Jackie Robinson. Bette Bao Lord. 1984.

 

THIRD GRADE

Ella Enchanted. Gail Carson Levine. 1997.

The Tale of Despereaux. Kate DiCamillo. 2004.

The Penderwicks. Jeanne Birdsall. 2007.

Haroun and the Sea of Stories. Salman Rushdie. 1990.

Shiloh. Phyllis Reynolds Naylor. 1991.

The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe. C.S. Lewis. 1950.

My Side of the Mountain. Jean Craighead George. 1959.

From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler. E.L. Konigsburg. 1967.

Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone.J.K. Rowling. 1998.

The Phantom Tollbooth. Norton Juster. 1961.

The Wolves of Willoughby Chase. Joan Aiken. 1963.

FOURTH GRADE

The Book of Three. Lloyd Alexander. 1964.

Number the Stars. Lois Lowry. 1989.

Where the Red Fern Grows. Wilson Rawls. 1961.

The Time Garden. Edward Eager. 1958.

Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry. Mildred Taylor. 1976.

Savvy. Ingrid Law. 2008 .

The Invention of Hugo Cabret. Brian Selznick. 2007.

The Egypt Game. Zilpha Keatley Snyder. 1967.

A Wrinkle in Time. Madeleine L’Engle. 1962.

Catherine, Called Birdy. Karen Cushman. 1994.

Mrs Frisby and the Rats of NIMH. Robert O’Brien. 1971.

 

FIFTH GRADE

The Miraculous Journey of Edward Tulane. Kate DiCamillo. 2006

Island of the Blue Dolphins. Scott O’Dell. 1960.

The Kite Fighters. Linda Sue Park. 2002.

Johnny Tremain. Esther Forbes. 1944.

Bridge to Terabithia. Katherine Paterson. 1977.

Harriet the Spy. Louise Fitzhugh. 1964

Chasing Vermeer. Blue Balliett. 2004.

Bud, Not Buddy. Christopher Paul Curtis. 1999.

Moon Over Manifest. Clare Vanderpool. 2010.

Pictures of Hollis Woods. Patricia Reilly Giff. 2004.

The Wanderer. Sharon Creech. 2002.

Dicey’s Song. Cynthia Voigt. 1982.

The Graveyard Book. Neil Gaiman. 2008.

SIXTH GRADE

True Confessions of Charlotte Doyle. Avi. 1990.

Holes. Louis Sachar. 1998.

Crispin: The Cross of Lead. Avi. 2002.

Summerland. Michael Chabon. 2002.

Diary of a Young Girl. Anne Frank. 1952.

The Hero and the Crown. Robin McKinley. 1984.

Carry On, Mr. Bowditch. Jean Lee Latham. 1955.

The Witch of Blackbird Pond. Elizabeth George Speare. 1958.

The Birchbark House. Louise Erdich. 1999.

A Single Shard. Linda Sue Park. 2001.

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Rivka, out of curiosity, why Dicey's Song instead of Homecoming?

 

Good question. :D Probably because Dicey's Song won the Newbery, but I do also prefer it. I hope my kids read all those books, though. It was very exciting to me to move to Maryland and come to know the locations - especially the Eastern Shore! Oh my gosh. It's so hard to picture what it's like out there, the stands of tall marsh grass intercut with channels of water, and no clear demarcation between land and bay - until you've been there.

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I love Rivka's list! But...:D it is really a very small but, but it is there. I think many of those books are wrongly characterized grade-wise. Some, like Eager's Half Magic books and The Penderwicks, are easily accessible and appropriate for a strong reader in first or second grade, while others, like The Graveyard Book or Dicey's Song, are more, well, dicey. ;) For example, my ds11, a stong reader, 5th grade, is working through L'Engle's Wrinkle series, and was massively, crying in bed at night, disturbed by aspects of the sequel Many Waters.

 

I love all the books on this list, do not mistake me, and I am NOT a shelterer when it comes to reading material--just be aware that your *placement* of the books in your child's life may differ very widely from this list. :001_smile:

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Thank you, Rivka -- I always think of your advocacy when I think of modern children's books! :)

 

:001_wub::blush: Nothing could make me prouder!

 

I feel compelled to say that I do have plenty of older children's classics on my elementary reading list too. Right now Alex is tearing her way through The Lost Princess of Oz, copyright 1917. (Oops! After WWI. I'll never learn. :tongue_smilie:)

 

(Also: are the umpteen Oz sequels twaddle, the way series of umpteen books are today? Or have they lost their twaddle nature due to age?)

 

I would also add, to my lists above, the Green Knowe series by L.M. Boston. Children of Green Knowe is the first. They were published beginning in the 1950s, and they're hauntingly beautiful children's fantasies. We're doing them as read-alouds now, so they're not on the list above.

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I've been working on compiling a list. :001_smile: I

 

That is a great list, Rivka. Thanks!

 

Google the Lewis Carroll Shelf List and a good list of Newberry type books will be available.

 

Pam

who just retrieved her login details after two years of only reading!

 

Thank you for logging in to share that list with us! I'd never heard of it before, but I Googled it and I think I will love it. Here's a link in case anyone else wants to go directly there.

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I love Rivka's list! But...:D it is really a very small but, but it is there. I think many of those books are wrongly characterized grade-wise. Some, like Eager's Half Magic books and The Penderwicks, are easily accessible and appropriate for a strong reader in first or second grade, while others, like The Graveyard Book or Dicey's Song, are more, well, dicey. ;) For example, my ds11, a stong reader, 5th grade, is working through L'Engle's Wrinkle series, and was massively, crying in bed at night, disturbed by aspects of the sequel Many Waters.

 

I love all the books on this list, do not mistake me, and I am NOT a shelterer when it comes to reading material--just be aware that your *placement* of the books in your child's life may differ very widely from this list. :001_smile:

 

As you see from my signature, my child is almost seven. These are not tried-and-tested ages, except to the extent that I remember when I read many of these books myself. Sometimes I think "Yeah, that was a great age to read that book!" and sometimes I think "...I should have waited a year or two." I imagine that I will be juggling the ages as I see how my child matures.

 

Sequels are a different kettle of fish sometimes. I think third grade is a fine age to read the first Harry Potter book, but I would be less happy about my third grader reading the sixth and seventh. We read aloud the first Percy Jackson books and adored them, but I quickly recognized that The Lost Hero is much more YA, and returned it to the library. Many Waters is another book that seems as if it has more of the YA nature than the earlier books in the series.

 

I left the grades in on my list because, well, that was how the list was organized. But I hope that no one would just take my word for it. Even I don't plan to just take my word for it! :lol:

Edited by Rivka
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Rivka, did you know that you can visit Lucy Boston's house? Wouldn't that be fun???

http://www.greenknowe.co.uk/

 

Our main children's librarian told me that she's been there! I requested one of the books from the closed stacks, and she and I had a happy, excited flurry of "oh my gosh, you know about these awesome books too!"

 

I had no idea that Green Knowe was a real house, but apparently the only thing that's made up is the ruined chapel and St. Christopher. Amazing!

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You'd be surprised what you can find used. The week after I bought a set of Eager's books (Half Magic etc), I saw a brand new set at a library sale for $2. I have also seen the Moomintroll books, Green Knowe books, Susan Cooper (luckily I had not bought those yet! No idea where my old copies ended up), tons of Beverly Cleary, Diamond in the Window, ...

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You'd be surprised what you can find used. The week after I bought a set of Eager's books (Half Magic etc), I saw a brand new set at a library sale for $2. I have also seen the Moomintroll books, Green Knowe books, Susan Cooper (luckily I had not bought those yet! No idea where my old copies ended up), tons of Beverly Cleary, Diamond in the Window, ...

 

:iagree: I've been working on my collection of elementary readers since my daughter was born. I never miss a library book sale. :D

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I'm not a children's lit expert by any stretch of the imagination, but here are some that I recently read and just WUB :001_wub:

 

Princess Academy by Shannon Hale

 

Alcatraz Vs. the Evil Librarians series by Brandon Sanderson

 

I would guess they would be good around 5th grade-ish

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Australian authors to watch out for:

 

Jackie French (careful, there's two authors by this name. Only one is Australian and I think the other doesn't write quality books but I'm not positive on this.) Anyway, most of this JF's fiction is young adult/middleschooler Australian stuff but she has written Hitler's Daughter, which is excellent and a great book called, I think Pharoah.

 

Ruth Park has written everything from children's to serious adult literature. Look for Playing Beattie Bow.

 

Nan Chauncy, older books for mid to late elementary to read alone

 

Colin Thiele, excellent

 

and British authors,

 

Rosemary Sutcliff of course

 

Noel Streatfield (lighter but lovely)

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I should never click on these threads. They just make my Amazon cart fill up and my wallet get empty :D

I have been grabbing them from paperbackswap! I listed some books my kids didn't want. some scholastic stuff...in a few days I had tons of credits! Great way to get books.

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Philippa Pearce, Minnow on the Say (well, we liked all of PP, but this was a special favourite).

 

Penelope Lively, The Voyage of QV66.

 

JBS Haldane, My Friend Mr Leakey.

 

Clive King, Stig of the Dump.

 

ETA: Eva Ibbotson! Especially Journey to the River Sea, The Dragonfly Pool, and The Star of Kazan.

 

Rosemary Manning's dragon books (Green Smoke, Dragon's Quest, etc.).

 

Ursula Le Guin's Earthsea books (just the first three, I'd say).

 

Sally Gardner's I, Coriander.

You know, I ordered a bunch of these books, but they fell out of the package so we never got to read them. We did read Stig of the Dump!

 

I've also got an Elinor Lyon book (House in Hiding). The kids are off by themselves finding abandoned, centuries old houses to live in on uninhabited islands. There so many books from the UK, especially from a certain time period, about the glories of life on a boat (Swallows and Amazons, Wind in the Willows, Minnow on the Say,...).

Edited by stripe
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I love Rivka's list! But...:D it is really a very small but, but it is there. I think many of those books are wrongly characterized grade-wise. Some, like Eager's Half Magic books and The Penderwicks, are easily accessible and appropriate for a strong reader in first or second grade, while others, like The Graveyard Book or Dicey's Song, are more, well, dicey. ;) For example, my ds11, a stong reader, 5th grade, is working through L'Engle's Wrinkle series, and was massively, crying in bed at night, disturbed by aspects of the sequel Many Waters.

 

I love all the books on this list, do not mistake me, and I am NOT a shelterer when it comes to reading material--just be aware that your *placement* of the books in your child's life may differ very widely from this list. :001_smile:

:iagree: That is a great list, but I think they need to be looked at to see where each kid might match up. Mine read many in there at earlier ages. My 6th grader thought Crispin was far too easy. Caitlin, mine has also just read L'Engle series and doing the same (she's 4th).

 

They are very easily collected at used bookstores/library sales, too, so if you just collect them and keep the shelf 'open' so to speak, you can grab and go.

 

The whole darned series of Swallows and Amazons, yep!

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What about a post-modern list? While I like the titles Rivka listed, many of the books are 50-60 years old. Surely, there have been good books written in the last 20 years or so? Or has enough time simply not elapsed to be able to judge more recent literature effectively?

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What about a post-modern list? While I like the titles Rivka listed, many of the books are 50-60 years old. Surely, there have been good books written in the last 20 years or so? Or has enough time simply not elapsed to be able to judge more recent literature effectively?

 

I would guess that the majority of the books we think of as "good modern books" are ones that we read ourselves.

 

I know there are some books that I really love (Tor Seidler's Wainscott Weasel) which were written in the last 20 years. I'm not sure if it can compare to the good books that are so often mentioned, but I know I love it very much. I also know I wouldn't ever have considered it if I hadn't been given a copy to read when I was in middle school. We like what we find familiar. :001_smile:

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I would guess that the majority of the books we think of as "good modern books" are ones that we read ourselves.

 

I know there are some books that I really love (Tor Seidler's Wainscott Weasel) which were written in the last 20 years. I'm not sure if it can compare to the good books that are so often mentioned, but I know I love it very much. I also know I wouldn't ever have considered it if I hadn't been given a copy to read when I was in middle school. We like what we find familiar. :001_smile:

 

I've got 16 books from the 21st century, but I'm always looking for more. Farrar Williams from this board (http://farrarwilliams.wordpress.com/) really keeps up with current children's lit and posts frequent reviews, so her blog may be the best place to start.

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I would guess that the majority of the books we think of as "good modern books" are ones that we read ourselves.

Totally! I am a big fan of Dell Yearling books for just this reason! Their covers make me feel very happy!

 

Angela at http://satorismiles.com/childrens-book-list/ has a booklist too. I know a lot of us contributed ideas as well as Angela's, so there were a lot of minds behind this one, and Angela nicely organized it to boot!

Edited by stripe
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I agree with most of the suggestions. I would add:

 

Misty of Chincoteague (Henry)

Lassie, Come Home (Knight)

Chronicles of Narnia

 

 

Gosh, I could probably go on and on....

 

We also just loved "The Willoughbys" by Lois Lowry, but I don't see it discussed much. It was published fairly recently.

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The list has no Roald Dahl

 

Bill

 

Yes, and that's just wrong! ;)

 

So I'd add in Roald Dahl, especially Danny, Champion of the World.

 

The Search for Delicious, by Natalie Babbit

Tuck Everlasting, again Natalie Babbit

Just about anything by Zilpha Keatley Snyder

Abel's Island, by William Steig

The Girl Who Could Fly, by Victoria Forester

A Single Shard, by Linda Sue Park

The Night Fairy, by Laura Amy Schlitz

The Ordinary Princess, by M.M. Kaye

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Our main children's librarian told me that she's been there! I requested one of the books from the closed stacks, and she and I had a happy, excited flurry of "oh my gosh, you know about these awesome books too!"

 

I had no idea that Green Knowe was a real house, but apparently the only thing that's made up is the ruined chapel and St. Christopher. Amazing!

 

I love love love Green Knowe books and have been hoarding the books as they went out of print for a while. They make me very emotional, I think because I really remember the feelings I had when reading them the first time.

 

They've made a film adaption now too. It's called From Time to Time. It is filmed at the manor.

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There are good books for reading, and good book for school/literature studies. There are some of each here, but I don't have the energy to tease them out.

 

Here's a list I included in a recent thread -- What are your favorite children's books written in the last 10-20 years. But not not everything my list is for Gr.4-5.

 

Summerland by Michael Chabon

anything by Nancy Farmer (the Sea of Trolls trilogy is OK for the middle grades, the rest for a bit older kids)

Haroun and the Sea of Stories and sequel by Rushdie

Michael Morpurgo

Peter Dickenson

Garth Nix

Michelle Paver's Chronicles of Ancient Darkness series

Skellig and My Name is Mina by Almond

Pullman's His Dark Materials trilogy

M. T. Anderson

Philip Reeve (particularly his Mortal Engines Quartet)

Walter Moers

Grace Lin

Daniel Pinkwater

Diana Wynne Jones

Un Lun Dun by China Miéville

Cornish's Monster Blood Tattoo series

Tamora Pierce

Scott Westerfeld

Terry Pratchett's Tiffany Aching series

Margaret Mahy

Bone by Jeff Smith

Neil Gaiman

 

(I had to break this post up... too long)

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And for a thread asking for books for an Advanced 9yo (I've edited out most of the older books)

 

The Little Grey Men and Down the Bright Stream (each have an intense chapter involving death, though not of a beloved character)

Also by BB: Brendon Chase

Swallows & Amazons series

The Wolves Chronicles by Joan Aiken (Wolves of Willoughby Chase is the first); also Aiken's books of short stories

Lloyd Alexander, including The Prydain Chronicles

M.T. Anderson's Pals in Peril series (Whales on Stilts is the first)

The Poisons of Caux series by Applebaum

The Girl Who Circumnavigated Fairyland in a Ship of Her Own Making (everyone should own this :D)

Peter Nimble and His Fantastic Eyes

The Hotel Under the Sand by Kage Baker

Blue Balliet

T.A. Barron's three Merlin series (These have recently been republished as one series... here's the first, The Lost Years; and a list of the original titles at wikipedia)

Oz (don't miss Marvellous Land of Oz/Land of Oz or Ozma of Oz

Anybodies series by N.E. Bode (more clever than you'd think)

Green Knowe series by L.M. Boston (The Children of Green Know is the first)

Elise Broach - Masterpiece and Shakespeare's Secret

Sisters Grimm series by Buckley (the last volume is due out in another month or so)

The Gideon Trilogy by Buckley-Archer

The Underland Chronicles by Suzanne Collins (Gregor the Overlander is the first)

anything by Padraic Colum

The Dark is Rising Sequence by Cooper

Lionboy series by Corder

Kevin Crossley-Holland's Arthur series (The Seeing Stone is the first)

Edward Eager

Michael Ende (not just The Neverending Story)

Elizabeth Enright, including the Melendy Quartet

Nancy Farmer's Sea of Trolls series (some violence, conservative Christians may have some trouble with this)

Jules Feiffer's middle grade books (as opposed to picture books): A Barrel of Laughs, A Vale of Tears; The Man in the Ceiling; A Room with a Zoo

The Great Brain series by Fitzgerald

Sid Fleischman

Cornelia Funke

Alan Garner

Jean Craighead George

Rene Goscinny's Nicholas series (and Asterix, of course :001_smile:)

Stephen & Lucy Hawking's George's Secret Key to the Universe and sequels (the third will be out in the US this year, or can be ordered from Book Depository if you can't wait)

Hermux Tantmoq series by Hoeye

Polly Horvath

much of Eva Ibbotson (the descriptions will give a pretty good idea of the ones written for a bit older kids)

Redwall

Moomins

Chronicles of Crestomanci by Wynne Jones

Konigsberg: From the Mixed-up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler

A Book Dragon by Kushner

A Wrinkle in Time and sequels

LaFevers' Theodosia series

Caroline Lawrence's Roman Mysteries series (some tense moments)

Robert Lawson

Astrid Lindgren -- Ronia, Rasmus and the Vagabond

much of Margaret Mahy

The Daydreamer by McEwan

Walter Moers -- 13-1/2 Lives of Captain Bluebear, Rumo

Mowll's Guild of Specialists series

Garth Nix - Seventh Tower and Keys to the Kingdom series, plus kids' sci/fi. Then look at the Abhorsen trilogy.

Robert O'Brien - NIMH books and The Silver Crown

Oppel's Silverwing series (his later books are more YA)

Edward Ormondroyd: Time at the Top, All in Good Time, David and the Phoenix

Michelle Paver's Chronicles of Ancient Darkness series (these are very good, but you may wish to wait a year or so)

Daniel Pinkwater - Neddiad, Yggyssey, anything else in the middle reader section

Brandon Sanderson - Alcatraz series

Mysterious Benedict Society series

Sylvia Waugh's Ormingat trilogy -- starts with Space Race

Cat Weatherill's Barkbelly and Snowbone

 

ETA: Summerland by Michael Chabon (one character has a violent, alcoholic father, but this is handled sensitively)

 

Bone by Jeff Smith (graphic novels)

Tintin

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