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Literature for a 5th Grader


wimseycat
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I was wondering if anyone has any literature suggestions for my 5th grade daughter.  She is an avid recreational reader, but for school I like to stick with classic-type literature.  She just finished MCT's Alice, Peter and Mole units.  I know she won't like the next level because they are more "boyish."  She has read most of the lit books from Memoria Press (loves dogs but hated Lassie - did not see that one coming!)  She doesn't like Pioneer/Old West type stuff either.  I have exhausted Robin Hood, King Arthur, The Little Princess, The Secret Garden etc... she is doing some reading comprehension involving different saints and she seems to enjoy that. Her 12 yo sister has read some Austen and Shakespeare but I don't think she is intellectually ready that level yet.

Ideas????

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Here is the fifth grade list from my curriculum:

 

Invincible Louisa by Cornelia Meigs

Little Women by Louisa May Alcott

Chales Dickens: The Man Who Had Great Expectations by Diane Stanley

A Christmas Carol by Charles Dickens

Poetry For Young People series...Tennyson, American Poetry and Emily Dickinson

The Arabian Nights Entertainment by Andrew Lang

Robin Hood by Roger L. Green

The King of the Golden River by John Ruskin

Nordic Gods and Heroes by Padraic Colum

2 of the Shakespeare retellings by Bruce Civille

The Little White Horse by Elizabeth Goudge

Swallows and Amazons by Arthur Ransome

Black Beauty by Anna Sewell

At the Back of the North Wind by George MacDonald

The Princess and the Goblin by George MacDonald

The Complete Fairy Tales by George MacDonald

Ronia, the Robber's Daughter by Astrid Lindgren

Call it Courage by Armstrong Sperry

Faerie Gold: Treasures from the Land of Enchantment by Hunsicker and Lindskoog

One of three books by Frances Hodgson Burnett

 

Of course, you would want to leave off the latter author...and Robin Hood too. :)

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I have a ds10 who's listening to Heidi with great interest.

 

Others I can think of (some are on our list):

 

Anne of the Green Gables

Island of the Blue Dolphins

Black Beauty

Treasures of the Snow (my dd6 is enjoying this one as a read-aloud)

Call of the Wild (on our list for next year)

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What a well-read child your daughter is!!!!

 

Check your library for these ideas:

 

1) It is time for your daughter to meet Mr. Shakespeare.

 

1a) Usborne has several Shakespeare books:

 

Illustrated Stories from Shakespeare  For 8 years and up.

Stories from Shakespeare  Talk to your Usborne Representative to see how/if this differs from the one above.  Rated for age 12 and up

World of Shakespeare For background.  This also teaches that if one understands the biography of the author, the book will have added depth, and the reader will have greater understanding -- an important lesson for high school and college Lit papers!

 

The best part is that many Usborne books are Internet-Linked.  This means that you go to the "quicklinks website," and you have instant enrichment by using internet resources.

 

1b) In Cartoon format:

 

Bravo, William Shakespeare

 

1c) There are other version of condensed Shakespeare tales for children (I can't find my copy this morning).  Others in the hive can help you.

 

 

2) When I was in 5th grade (1980-1981), our teacher Rosie Ryan taught us with Newberry Award Winners rather than with a textbook of literary selections.  I don't know if this was a hippie/new agey thing, but we got a great education from a tremendous teacher!

 

Books we read that year:

Island of the Blue Dolphins

Amos Fortune, Free Man

To Be A Slave

Old Yeller

My Side of the Mountain

Tuck Everlasting

Sounder

and more!!!!

 

Read alouds that year:

The Great Gilly Hopkins

Superfudge

Bridge to Terabithia

Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of NIHM

Summer of the Swans (or may have been 6th grade)

The Westing Game

 

Imagine my pride when I came across the Newbery poster as an adult, and I recognized several of these awesome books!  Thank you Rosie Ryan, wherever you are!!!  She introduced us to "great, young adult lit" (and the ideas that went with it), and she made us "well read."

 

You don't need to read the specific books I listed, but here is the Newbery Website.  Send your daughter there. 

 

OR

 

March your daughter down to the library and have her look at the Newbery Poster on the wall.  Pick one.  Any one.   You may also tell your librarian what you are looking for, and see which one is his/her favorite recommendation.

 

Disclaimer:  Newbery Award is given to literature for children UP TO AGES 14. Not all books may be appropriate for your 5th grader.  I can't think of many that I wouldn't recommend, but I haven't read many of the recent ones.  If your child is sensitive to violence, Where the Red Fern Grows has a gruesome scene in which a kid falls on an ax.  Contact your librarian for info on specific books, or choose a skeleton list and post it here at the hive for feedback.

 

 

-------------------------------------------------------

 

I'll post more later!

 

 

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Sorry for the interruption.

 

3) Battle of the Books  is a reading competition in which children read books and answer questions in a quiz-bowl type of event. 

 

Disclaimer: I have never been to a Battle of the Books event, but I have friends who have children that have participated.

 

To find a Battle of the Books event, check the BOTB website, or do a google search for "Battle of the Books [city state]."

 

Whether your child participates in a BOTB event or not, the lists are reflective of what her peers are reading to be challenged.  If your child participates, note that most events are team events, and no child read all items on the list.  They work as a team to cover all of the material.

 

Sample questions allegedly used at BOTB.

----------------------------------------------

Other things to know:

 

***NOW is the age to start your child on the habit of making literary notes of her school reading assignments.  I posted on this a week or so ago here, entry # 19.  Please please please go and read this entry on how and why to make notes on literature for this age.***

 

 

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We are studying the Ancients this year and here is the list my fifth grader is reading:

Hittite Warrior

Gilgamesh the Hero

The Golden Goblet

Tales from Africa

The White Stag

Mara, Daughter of the Nile

God King

Black Ships Before Troy

The Golden Fleece

The Bronze Bow

Caesar's Gallic War

The Eagle

In Search of a Homeland (the Aeneid)

Theras and His Town

Greek Myths

Alexander the Great

The Children's Homer

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I teach 5th and 6th grade English at a private school, so based on what my students have loved most, I can recommend:

 

Bud, Not Buddy by Christopher Paul Curtis -- historical fiction set during the Great Depression; very likable 10-year-old narrator, lots of historical background info woven throughout, humorous and very touching read

 

A Family Apart by Joan Lowery Nixon -- historical fiction set in the pre-Civil War era; touches on Irish immigration, urban poverty, Westward expansion, orphan trains, and abolitionism. Great suspenseful plot with a strong female protagonist. If she likes it, there are several sequels.

 

The Adventures of Ulysses by Bernard Evslin -- a retelling of The Odyssey, perfect for a 5th grader, beautifully told, engaging

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Here are the books my dd enjoyed in 5th grade:

 

Literature

1.       The Princess and Curdie – George MacDonald – RA

2.       Five Children and It – E Nesbit – RA

3.       The Phoenix & The Carpet – E Nesbit - RA

4.       The Story of the Amulet – E Nesbit - RA

5.       The Jungle Book – Rudyard Kipling - Audio

6.       Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea – Jules Verne - RA

7.       Alice in Wonderland – RA & Canon Book Group discussion

8.       Through the Looking Glass– RA & Canon Book Group discussion

9.       Pinocchio - RA

10.   Rip Van Winkle & The Legend of Sleepy Hollow – RA

11.   The Hound of the Baskervilles – Arthur Conan Doyle – RA

12.   The Sign of Four - Arthur Conan Doyle - RA

13.   The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes – Arthur Conan Doyle – RA

14.   Lamb’s Shakespeare:  King Lear, The Taming of the Shrew – RA

15.   Huckleberry Finn – Mark Twain - RA

16.   Mark Twain short stories – The Million Pound Bank Note and The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County - Audio

17.   Little Women – Louisa May Alcott

 

Chronological Historical Fiction (RA/IR/Audio)

1.       I, Juan de Pareja - IR

2.       A Journy to the New World – Kathryn Lasky

3.       Calico Captive – Elizabeth George Speare – IR

4.       Ben and Me – Robert Lawson-IR

5.       Sarah Bishop – Scott O’Dell - IR

6.       Johnny Tremaine – Esther Forbes - Audio

7.       Winter of the Red Snow – Kristiana Gregory - IR

8.       Felicity’s Story Collection - IR

9.       The Lacemaker and the Princess – Kimberly Brubaker Bradley - IR

10.   Marie Antoinette, Princess of Versailles – Kathryn Lasky - IR

11.   Catherine: The Great Journey – Kristiana Gregory - IR

12.   Streams to the River, Streams to the Sea – Scott O’Dell – IR

13.   The Story of Napoleon – H. E. Marshall – IR

14.   Ludwig Van Beethoven – Mike Venezia

15.   Shaka, King of the Zulus – Diane Stanley

16.   Lyddie – Katherine Paterson - IR

17.   Kirsten’s Story Collection - IR

18.   The Ballad of Lucy Whipple - IR

19.   Shipwrecked – Blumbert -IR

20.   Addy’s Story Collection -IR

21.   Island of the Blue Dolphins- IR

22.   Across Five Aprils

23.   Caddie Woodlawn – IR

24.   Caddie Woodlawn’s Family – Carol Ryrie Brink - IR

25.   Little House in the Big Woods – Laura Ingalls Wilder – RA

26.   Little House in the Prairie - RA

27.   Farmer Boy - RA

28.   On the Banks of Plum Creek - RA

29.   By The Shores of Silver Lake- RA

30.   The Long Winter- RA

31.   Little Town on the Prairie

32.   These Happy Golden Years

33.   The Evolution of Calpurnia Tate – IR

34.   Mrs. Frisby & The Rats of NIMH

35.   Hitty, Her First Hundred Years – Rachel Field

36.   A Light in the Storm – Karen Hesse

37.   The Great Turkey Walk – Kathleen Karr

38.   Bud, Not Buddy – Christopher Paul Curtis

 

Independent Reading

1.       When You Reach Me – Rebecca Stead - IR

2.       11 Birthdays – Wendy Maas - IR

3.       A Mango-Shaped Space – Wendy Maas - IR

4.       Liar & Spy – Rebecca Stead - IR

5.       Half Magic – Edward Eager - Audio

6.       Ella Enchanted – Gale Carson Levine - IR

7.       Magic By the Lake – Edward Eager - RA

8.       A Wrinkle in Time – Madeline L’Engle - IR

9.       Knight’s Castle – Edward Eager - IR

10.   A Tale of Two Castles – Gail Carson Levine - IR

11.   Kit’s Story Collection – Valerie Tripp

12.   The Twenty-One Balloons – William Pene DuBois- RA

13.   Queen Zixi of Ix – L Frank Baum - IR

14.   Misty of Chincoteague – Marguerite Henry - IR

15.   Stormy, Misty’s Foal – Marguerite Henry - IR

16.   Sea Star, Orphan of Chincoteague – Marguerite Henry – IR

17.   Jennifer, Hecate, Macbeth, William McKinley, and Me, Elizabeth – EL Konigsberg – IR

18.   The Rise and Fall of Mount Majestic – Jennifer Trafton – IR

19.   Savvy – Ingrid Law – IR

20.   Found – Margaret Peterson Haddix

21.   Sent – Margaret Peterson Haddix

22.   Sabotoged – Margaret Peterson Haddix

23.   Pippi Longstocking – Astrid Lindgren

24.   Torn – Margaret Peterson Haddix

25.   King of the Wind – Margeurite Henry

26.   The Sisters Grimm – The Fairy Tale Detectives – Michael Buckley

27.   The Sisters Grimm – The Unusual Suspects – Michael Buckley

28.   13 Gifts – Wendy Mass

29.   Finally – Wendy Mass

30.   Trading Faces – Julia Jennifer Ray

31.   Scumble – Ingrid Law

32.   Beezus & Ramona – Ingrid Law

33.   Jeremy Fink – Wendy Mass

34.   The Candymakers – Wendy Mass

35.   Escape to Witch Mountain – Alexander Key

36.   A Family Apart – J L Nixon

37.   Gregor the Overlander – Suzanne Collins

38.   Gregor and the Curse of the Warmbloods

39.   Gregor and the Prophecy of Bane

40.   Gregor and the Marks of Secret

41.   Gregor & the Code of Claw

42.   The Westing Game

43.   Harriet the Spy

44.   Harriet Spies Again

45.   The Game – Diana Wynne Jones

46.   Beauty – Robin McKinley

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Thank you everyone for all the great suggestions.  Many that have been suggested we have covered, but I will relook at some of the ones I have missed. It is hard when a lot of the books I enjoyed as a child are rejected. It feels like a personal judgment and you are like, "how can you NOT like this book..." :scared:  

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