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Children's books

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Age appropriate longer books for 5 year old fluent reader

30 replies

blondie87 · 11/10/2020 09:20

Hi there,

I have a five year old who is a mostly fluent reader who has just started reading independently as a hobby which I am very keen to support. I’m looking for relatively long books but which have an age-appropriate plot and would be very grateful for suggestions! TIA.

OP posts:
Fauvist · 11/10/2020 09:25

DD really liked the easier Enid Blytons at that age, eg Magic Faraway Tree. Also Ottoline books by Chris Riddell, Claude books by Alex T Smith and the Pip Street series by Jo Simmons.

Invisimamma · 11/10/2020 09:25

Captain underpants
Horrid henry
Roald Dahl books
13 Storey Tree House series
Pamela Buchart's books

cloudcett · 11/10/2020 09:25

Girl or boy? My DDs both loved the 'Daisy and the trouble with...' books at that age.

edwardson · 11/10/2020 09:26

Flat Stanley. Ronald Dahl books?

blondie87 · 11/10/2020 09:28

A boy. He loves adventure/science/funny stories. Thank you for the recommendations so far!

OP posts:
ComicePear · 11/10/2020 09:32

Horrid Henry - some of them are specifically aimed at early readers
Captain Underpants
Roald Dahl - the easiest ones are The Enormous Crocodile, Esio Trot and The Giraffe, the Pelly and Me

blondie87 · 11/10/2020 09:34

Thank you- I grew up on Mallory Towers etc which wouldn’t be my son’s thing so these are really helpful! Captain Underpants looks right up his street!

OP posts:
bathorshower · 11/10/2020 09:35

Dick King-Smith
Roald Dahl has some pretty complex vocabulary, from having been in this position!

PhilODox · 11/10/2020 09:37

Lots of boys enjoy Malory Towers.
My Naughty Little Sister is great for early readers.
I would say Captain Underpants is too old for a 5yo.
Dixie O'Day series is good.
Jolly Rogers Series
Ottiline series
Horrid Henry

SimonJT · 11/10/2020 09:40

Roald Dalh, my five year old has nearly finished Matilda, there are quite a few tricky words but he asks one of us what they mean when he gets stuck.

Mallory towers, horrid henry, the first harry potter is quite accessible.

noblegiraffe · 11/10/2020 09:53

Daisy and the trouble with... books by Kes Gray are brilliantly funny.

Seeline · 11/10/2020 09:59

My DS preferred the Dirty Berty books to Horrid Henry.

Beast Quest were very popular when he was that age, but that was 15 years ago.

Percy Jackson
Artemis Fowl

WHIZADORA · 14/10/2020 21:12

aquintillionwords.com/2020/10/04/the-snark-book-review/

The Snark by Justin Davis! This is fantastic, I managed to read a preview! Its not too long,great illustrations and funny too!

Duckchick · 14/10/2020 22:27

DS at 5 isn't that good a reader yet but is loving having the Magic Treehouse series books read to him. Of the chapter books I read to him they are the first ones I think he'll be able to read himself. They are short chapter books which still have quite a few pictures, but there are loads in the series - they are adventure with a bit of non fiction and the plot continues across books. Our library has both the American original versions and the British English versions which have different titles (Wikipedia has a list of which is which).

We have the Ottoline books and he loves them but the language is a bit more complicated and the plot is slightly more complex (a bit more is between the lines rather than stated) so I think he is further from being able to read those independently.

We've also had a couple from the Oliver Moon series out from the library, which he's enjoyed. They are adventure stories about a young wizard. They are a little bit longer than the Magic Treehouse books but I'd say just as accessible in terms of language / plot.

Flamingolingo · 14/10/2020 22:30

In addition to the above...
Rabbit and Bear
Agent Weasel
Mr Penguin

lovemylot1 · 14/10/2020 22:31

Try Zoey and Sassafras series.
My dd is a fluent reader aged 5 but also loves nature and science so we get her the National geographic readers.

WhereverIGoddamnLike · 14/10/2020 22:33

Time Hunters series by Chtis Blake. My boys were 5/6 when they read those and loved the travelling through time aspect and visiting different cultures. Very fun.

The Frogspell series. Cant remembered the author. Funny magic themed stories with good villains for that age.

blondie87 · 15/10/2020 06:35

Thank you so much for all the recommendations. I’m going to buy some now and get some for Christmas.

OP posts:
xyzandabc · 15/10/2020 06:40

At that age my ds loved the Dogman series of books.

Grobagsforever · 15/10/2020 06:48

@cloudcett

Girl or boy? My DDs both loved the 'Daisy and the trouble with...' books at that age.
Argh! There aren't girl or boy books for goodness sake! They are just books are all children should read a wide variety, not get pigeon holed by their gender.
XFPW · 15/10/2020 06:49

My DS started on the How to Train your Dragon series at that age. There are 10/11/12? of them now (they were a fairly new series when DS was small) and well worth it. They are INFINITELY better than the films, and in addition to reading the books, the audio books are fantastic. David Tennant reads them (not sure how far into the series he does but certainly the first 5/6 I think) and they kept our entire family entertained on long car journeys many times over the years when DC were younger.

ThunderSkies · 15/10/2020 07:01

Enid blyton.

Can’t stand horrid Henry.

MumbleJunction · 15/10/2020 07:12

We did how to train your dragon too, just know that the last books in the series are a lot more grown up (there's a big war). Don't give the full set at once, as we did. They are great, nothing like the lame movies!

evilharpy · 15/10/2020 07:25

My nearly 6yo has been a fluent reader for quite a while. Dick King Smith has been a winner as well as some Judy Blume books like Freckle Juice.

WellTidy · 15/10/2020 07:29

The owl who was afraid of the dark and all the other Jill Tomlinson books

Oliver Moon series

The younger Roald Dahl - the enormous crocodile, the giraffe the pelly and me etc

Zoe’s rescue books series by Amelia Cobb

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