osprey_archer: (window)
osprey_archer ([personal profile] osprey_archer) wrote2011-01-25 06:43 pm

Children's Books

On the Blue Willow post a few days ago, [livejournal.com profile] visualthinker11 commented that she had been feeling nostalgic recently - she wanted to do some sort of summertime reread/review of childhood classics, and would I be interested?

Would I be interested? I think the idea is SPIFFY. A chance to find other people who read and loved the same books! To proselytize about my favorite books to those who haven't heard of them! To discover through other people books that I somehow missed, and must read!

So I've been working on a list of books that I would talk about. My main criteria: I love the book, or at least at one point loved the book, and I have something interesting to say about it.

So: the list.

Bona fide classics: Caddy Woodlawn and The Borrowers and the Little House books, and also I Capture the Castle (never mind I didn't read that last one till college!).

Books that have improved with age, like Charlotte's Web, and books which age has tarnished, like the Tortall books.

And books that age has not changed, but deepened: Zilpha Keatley Snyder's The Changling and The Headless Cupid (well, Zilpha Keatley Snyder's whole oeuvre, really - like The Egypt Game), and Elizabeth Marie Pope's The Perilous Gard.

Books that blew me away the first time I read them: Number the Stars, Sylvia Louis Engdahl's Enchantress from the Stars and (especially) its sequel, The Far Side of Evil, Megan Whelan Turner's The Queen of Attolia. (I love the other Queen's Thief books, too. But they didn't knock the top off my brain.)

Books that I adore even as they drive me crazy: Isobelle Carmody's books, especially the Obernewtyn Chronicles and Alyzon Whitestarr.

Fantasy books: Crown Duel, Ella Enchanted, The Golden Compass and Sabriel (I didn't like the sequels to either very much), Matilda, The Moorchild, Clockwork, So You Want to Be a Wizard and on and on and on...

Books that I don't think anyone but me ever read, which is totally unfair because they rock: The Secret Voice of Gina Zhang, Nekomah Creek, Becoming Rosemary, and The Losing Christina trilogy (which is, and I quote myself, is "so eerie and beautiful and just iridescent. Incandescent. Efflorescent.")

And - but this list is quite long enough! But I'm sure I've forgotten a ton; and doubtless there are lots of books I should have listed, that I've simply never read. So tell me about them! Or tell me if you particularly want to see any of these reviewed - or if you loved one of them and just want to chat about it - or anything! Is there anything in the world as wonderful as talking about favorite books?

[identity profile] osprey-archer.livejournal.com 2011-01-27 04:31 am (UTC)(link)
Did you end up becoming friends with the girl reading Greensky? It's hard to imagine an unpleasant person enjoying them, but I suppose stalking her might throw a wrench in things.

And yes, freaky odd! I love the phrase, too. I loved the scene where Saaski finds the bagpipes. She's such a good mix of human and not-human, and tries so hard to be a proper human girl for her parents and just can't quite.

Her relationship with her grandmother was probably my favorite, though.

[identity profile] asakiyume.livejournal.com 2011-01-27 07:11 am (UTC)(link)
We didn't exactly become friends, but she was so kind and good natured in declining my overtures that I didn't mind. I learned a lot about how to turn a person down from that experience. (And I have to say that I knew enough to quit when I got the not-interested answer.)