author_by_night: (Banned Books by Fiction Alley)
author_by_night ([personal profile] author_by_night) wrote2006-07-18 08:16 am
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K-12 Reading Poll

Okay. I'm going to attempt a cut yet again.

This poll is on what books you read between preschool and grade twelve - if you're unfamiliar with the American School system, that's age three through age seventeen/eighteen.

I didn't include grade level. Well, they are in order with some grade level/age in mind, but truthfully, everyone reads books at a different rate, and everyone's version of "grade level" differs. I know people who thought I was very mature for reading Baby-Sitter's club at eight years old; I know others who stopped reading them at seven years old. Same with Harry Potter - I've seen reading lists with Harry Potter for third graders and lists with Harry Potter for sixth graders.

I got some of these books out of memory, and some from lists. I tried to keep it as not-exclusively-American as possible, but some of these books are not too specific with their location (such as The Giver), and others, I have no idea what they are about, let alone where they come from. Plus, I used to live in Europe, and I read a lot of these American books.

Please do share other books you've read - my aim is to see what books kids read, and when. I was well read when I was younger, yet I never once touched most of the books I see on the book lists. (I keep seeing books that I've never heard of, and don't know if I don't remember them, or if they were never read to me, or if they were published when I'd outgrown that level).

ETA: You can pick a book you read then, or one you've read recently.

Okay, pray the cut works.


[Poll #772446]

[identity profile] partly-bouncy.livejournal.com 2006-07-18 12:37 pm (UTC)(link)
First question a bit difficult as I connect with the 1980s mostly but not the 1990s and not the 1970s.

And Sleepover Friends! by Susan Saunders were my favorite in about 5th grade. I loved them and read them much more than the Babysitters Club.

[identity profile] ehnel.livejournal.com 2006-07-18 12:37 pm (UTC)(link)
Have a sudden worry I've messed up the poll - I ticked Cinderella/Sleeping Beauty/etc because I assumed you meant just the fairy tales - in Grimms - but now it occurs to me maybe you meant some individual books or something.

Re: classic books ... I read what I like, really - I don't much care if it's considered classic or not.


I didn't include grade level. Well, they are in order with some grade level/age in mind, but truthfully, everyone reads books at a different rate, and everyone's version of "grade level" differs.


Absolutely. Everyone reads at their own rate, and should be allowed to do so. It used to be one of the things I hated most of all about being a kid - people telling me I was "too young" for a particular book. They didn't manage to stop me, though - I'd just pick up the book whenever they weren't around, and read it anyway. I read some very odd things when I was a child. Robert Heilein and L Ron Hubbard, for example. *snort*

[identity profile] godricgal.livejournal.com 2006-07-18 12:38 pm (UTC)(link)
Before I complete the poll, do you mean books that we had to read in school or just books of our own choice?

You really have a problem with those cuts, do you, it must be so frustrating, have you submitted a support request to LJ?
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[identity profile] swatkat24.livejournal.com 2006-07-18 12:39 pm (UTC)(link)
I'm not familiar with a lot of these American titles, but some of my absolute favourites in my childhood were Hans Andersen's fairytales and Enid Blyton's books - all of them. I also read a LOT of classics, not just Austen.

[identity profile] gileonnen.livejournal.com 2006-07-18 01:19 pm (UTC)(link)
Did you mean the Pat Conroy The Water Is Wide, or some other version? And I only clicked books I finished; I started most of the ones on that list.

[identity profile] pennswoods.livejournal.com 2006-07-18 01:25 pm (UTC)(link)
Just a list of more books that I couldn't fill in for the last bit:

The Sound and the Fury, The Old Man and the Sea, A Day no Pigs Would Die, 1984, Animal Farm, The Prince, The Yearling, (Heaps of Judy Blume books), The Westing Game, The Mysterious Disappearance of LEON, I mean NOEL, The Famous Stanley Kidnapping Case, The Witches of Worm, Where the Red Fern Grows, Heart of Darkness, The Three Investigators Series...

[identity profile] parsimonia.livejournal.com 2006-07-18 01:26 pm (UTC)(link)
Born in '85, so my memory's a little hazy as to what I read back then, but I think the things I checked off are pretty acurate.

I distinctly remember, though, that when I was in grade two, a lot of people were reading Amelia Bedelia, and for some reason I decided I didn't like those books and refused to read them. lol

As for the last question, I think I've had a sampling of classic books, but haven't read enough. Partly because I wasn't 'forced' to in school, partly because my parents often forget that I don't absorb all their knowledge by osmosis and that I would actually need to read these books myself! lol.

I think a lot of what you end up reading in school depends and varies on the whims of the teacher sometimes.

[identity profile] ani-bester.livejournal.com 2006-07-18 01:38 pm (UTC)(link)
You left out Mark Twain 0.o

I was also reading Stark Trek and Star Wars and Pern and some other fantasy Sc-fi stuff that aren't classics but sure were fun.

Also the Demolished Man by Alfred Bester and many short stories, and anything by Ray Bradbury I could get my hands on!

My dad owned a book/comic store so I pretty much would jsut go on and grab the shiny, but also mom took us to the library a lot.

[identity profile] stmargarets.livejournal.com 2006-07-18 01:56 pm (UTC)(link)
I don't know if this will impact your poll, but one of the great things about being a parent is getting to read all the old children's books and all the new ones that were written since you were a kid. I'm guessing my reading lapse would be titles written in the 80's since my kid was born in 1998 and his school library doesn't go that far back.

I read alot as a kid in the seventies.

[identity profile] shalli.livejournal.com 2006-07-18 01:57 pm (UTC)(link)
Only mentioned one book in that option to give more, and feel like adding more that I can recall from those years (should note that in the survey itself, I ticked a few that I have read which came out after I finished high school)

The Very Hungry Caterpillar;
Possum Magic;
A Walk in the Jungle;
The Pound Puppy books;
Mrs Wishy-Washy;
Bridge to Terabithia;
Tall Tales of the Speewah;
I Am David;
Snugglepot and Cuddlepie;
Blinky Bill;
The Magic Pudding;
The Song of the Lioness Quartet;
The Immortals Quartet;
Discworld;
The Lost Prince (anyone else read this one? It's by Frances Hodgson Burnett, author of The Secret Garden);
Morris Glitzman's books;
far, far, far too many others to continue on ;)
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[identity profile] akashasheiress.livejournal.com 2006-07-18 02:12 pm (UTC)(link)
I did read Curious George - forgot to click him.

[identity profile] pennswoods.livejournal.com 2006-07-18 02:38 pm (UTC)(link)
And oh, where's my head? The Anne of Green Gables series of course.

[identity profile] jamc91.livejournal.com 2006-07-18 02:56 pm (UTC)(link)
I love polls. The ticky boxes especially.

I tried reading Jane Austen and I couldn't. No, really.

[identity profile] raggedass-road.livejournal.com 2006-07-18 04:00 pm (UTC)(link)
THE BUTTER BATTLE BOOK! aaah! I loved that thing! It was so weird and goofy and full of strange grown-up meaning!

Man, I can smell the nostalgia from here.

[identity profile] ghostlygrove.livejournal.com 2006-07-18 04:41 pm (UTC)(link)
I'd checked a lot more than what I ended up leaving, 'cause I remembered you said "books from SCHOOL". Most of the books I'd checked (which weren't many to begin with) I read on my own.

I don't know if I've read classics or not. I know Hundred Years of Solitude is considered one (didn't make me like it ¬_¬ :S), but I don't know... I still consider myself very cut-off from literature.

[identity profile] zoepaleologa.livejournal.com 2006-07-18 06:00 pm (UTC)(link)
I'm fifty-one years old, and therefore many of the "school" readers are way later than me.

Here's what I read voraciously in the fifties, early sixties. First off, I taught myself to read at age three, by dint of my mother's reading to me endlessly.

Winnie-the-Pooh/The House at Pooh Corner
Fairy Tales (all sorts, Andersen, traditional and the complete Grimms - of which I had read everyone by the time I was seven. Some were damn scary).
Greek/Trojan and Norse Mythology (bowdlerised for the kiddies)
Paddington Bear
Mary Plain - another series of books about a smartarsed talking bear. I adored her.
Santa Clause in Summer, by Compton McKenzie (of Whisky Galore fame, it's his only children's book)
101 Dalmatians by Dodie Smith

When I was nine, I graduated to grown up stuff, mostly sci-fi (esp. John Wyndham) and at 11 I started reading Orwell. I was a precocious little show off. Plus the telly was crap in the sixties, AND we had no internet...

[identity profile] frankieb-sq87.livejournal.com 2006-07-18 08:08 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh, I lvoed the Egypt Game and Charlotte Doyle. . . might have to go and re-read those. ..

[identity profile] starpaint.livejournal.com 2006-07-18 09:13 pm (UTC)(link)
...I read 51 of the books on that list. Huh. That's vaguely terrifying.

I recognize a bunch of the books that people listed in the comments, but I wouldn't have thought of them on my own. Then again, my elementary school librarian loved me because I read absolutely everything she ever recommended to me. Have a few of those: The Dark is Rising and sequels, The Mennyms and sequels, and The Westing Game. Also have the Mary Poppins books; as far as I can tell, most people don't remember that there were books, but I loved them. All of those books go on this list by virtue of still being on my bookshelf for some reason or another.

[identity profile] lady-sarai.livejournal.com 2006-07-18 11:04 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh, squee!! Reading and books! =D See, when I go for my Masters, I want to get it in Literacy Education, so... =P I have read a lot of these even though they've been published recently and technically I'm "too old" for them. Phbbbbt! ;)

But, oh! Hug-a-Bunch!! Boxcar Children, Babysitters' Club (and Babysitter's little sister!), Sweet Valley... Roald Dahl! Wayside Stories! Anastasia Krupnik!! I read Frindle aloud to my second graders this fall and they LOVED it so much! =D

I was one of those children who read on the bus, at lunch, on the playground... My family would take my book away if they wanted to punish me. =D

Oh, my greatest love... BOOKS.

[identity profile] sagacious-c.livejournal.com 2006-07-19 02:40 am (UTC)(link)
Ahhhh, this poll was so fun to take -- it led me down the reminiscing road. I heart summer reading, and well, reading in general!

[identity profile] sixth-light.livejournal.com 2006-07-19 03:13 am (UTC)(link)
I listed a few you didn't mention, all Kiwi children's classics - but really there's too many to name. I'd discovered historical novels by the time I was six, much to my parents' dismay (they're almost as bad as Mills & Boone for softcore porn, though I didn't understand most of those bits 'till I was a little older) and when I was eleven I found the sci-fi/fantasy section at the library and didn't look back. I was also a devout reader of non-fiction as a child; among my favourites were Bill Bryson, Carl Sagan, and anything up-to-date on dinosaurs.

I remember that when I met my boyfriend I was horrified to discover he'd never read the Narnia books. I just didn't understand how someone could get to be twenty and have not encountered them. He's read them now, of course. *g*

[identity profile] jan-aq.livejournal.com 2006-07-19 07:57 am (UTC)(link)
I started reading Star Trek novels when I was 10.