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Which books have you borrowed from your DCs and then really enjoyed?

180 replies

5Foot5 · 15/09/2010 16:57

About 4 years ago while on holiday I had got fed up with exahusted my own holiday reading so borrowed one of DDs (she was 10 at the time) It was one of the Robert Muchamore "Cherub" books and I found it fun, escapist stuff and have read several others since then.

While on holiday this year she was in stitches over a book called "Spud" by a South African writer called John van de Ruit. I borrowed it at the weekend and have just finished it. Marvellously funny book!

However, she still has not managed to interest me in the Twilight saga.

Which books have your DCs introduced you to?

OP posts:
tyaca · 15/09/2010 20:35

bubbles - my sister always used to re-read the whole series at xmas at my parents at xmas. she reckoned the fifth time was the best Grin. homecoming is just amazing, isn't it? she does the people so well AND it's a cross-american road trip involving five kids and no adults. bliss.

BubblesMyBubbles · 15/09/2010 20:40

Ahhh I could just sit down and read it from cover to cover now Smile

How many books are there in the series do you know??? Ive only ever read Homecoming (I think it was a last minute stocking filler courtesy of mum one year Wink)

Im sure it would be something worth investing in for DD when shes slightly bigger (8 is a bit too young atm)

tyaca · 15/09/2010 20:47

couldn't list off top of head. just googled - seven. not read all of them myself. called the tillerman series, number two, Dicey's Song is the one that i loved the most.

BubblesMyBubbles · 15/09/2010 20:50

Brilliant! Off to have a look, thanks Smile

Whoamireally · 15/09/2010 20:58

Love the Septimus Heap series by Angie Sage.
Also the Spook's Apprentice series by Joseph Delaney - read them all.

Probably the best series of all is Michael Scott's Secrets of Nicholas Flamel.

Plus another vote for (Sir) Terry Pratchett- the guy is a genius and makes me laugh out loud every time Grin

As you can probably tell I like fantasy-type books - but find the ones aimed at kids/ teenagers slightly more down to earth, if that is not a total contradiction in terms Grin

hattyyellow · 15/09/2010 21:29

These are brilliant - "The Dark is Rising" by Susan Cooper. Combines fantasy/Arthurian legend/mythology/children battling good and evil forces/high magic.

I first read them aged about 8 or 9 and still happily read them now. Would highly recommend.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Dark_Is_Rising_Sequence

mollyroger · 15/09/2010 21:33

realitychick - ds and i love all the potential catchphrases in Mr Gumm....''tis unwise!''

The truth is A lemon meringue''

it's funty!

mollyroger · 15/09/2010 21:35

DH and I adore Terry pretchett, but in terms of his children's books, the wee 3 men series have much to commend them.

spiritmum · 15/09/2010 21:35

Tom's Midnight Garden. I howl at the end every time I read it.

Little White Horse. Great comfort blanket of a book.

Asterix to make me laugh.

I'd forgotten Elidor. Must go and get some Alan Garner for me dd1 to read.

mysteryfairy · 15/09/2010 21:48

The Book Thief is absolutely brilliant - everyone should read it.

DS loved it too when he was in year 7 and lent it to his German/form teacher. A huge queue built up behind me at parents evening as the two of us discussed its brilliance. It is stunningly good and unbearably moving - I really recommend it.

KurriKurri · 15/09/2010 22:13

If you fancy some school stories - as a child I loved the Jennings books by Anthony Buckeridge, and they still make me hoot with laughter as an adult.

BelligerentGhoul · 15/09/2010 22:18

I don't steal them from the dds; I just go to the library and get loads of teen books and pretend it's work (English teacher!).

Agree that the Philip reeves 'Mortal Engines' series is excellent. Ditto The Wind Singer series.

A series beginning with one called 'Acros The Nightingale Floor' is superb. This is the Tales of the Otori series that someone mentioned below. I frequently rec it on here - trust me!

I enjoyed the first Georgia Nicholson diary hugely but got fed up with later ones.

Patrick Ness' Chaos Walkin series, which begins with 'The Knife Of Never Letting Go' is vastly superior to most of the 'adult' books I've read in the past five years.

BelligerentGhoul · 15/09/2010 22:20

Sorry I didn't read the whole thread and see some of these have been mentioned.

Meg Rosoff's books are getting sillier and sillier imho. Her one about the strange child in a hut was ludicrous.

BelligerentGhoul · 15/09/2010 22:20

And her one called something about Justin iirc - just stupid.

notimetoshop · 15/09/2010 22:28

hattyyellow. yes i've reread The Dark is Rising - i remembered loving them as a child but couldn't remember them. and they are great. v atmospheric.

just read His Dark Materials, brilliant.

and another vote for Holes - Louis Sachar. it is v diffrent kidn of magic realism for kids. funny.

edam · 15/09/2010 22:33

Horrible Histories - just really enjoyed reading the Blitz one with ds.

From my own childhood that I'm sharing with ds (or have on my reading list for him): E Nesbit especially The Railway Children, When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit, The Family at One End Street, the complete works of Roald Dahl. Am hoping I can smuggle Ballet Shoes past him but given he's a 7yo boy, I might lose that one!

DilysPrice · 15/09/2010 22:38

DD and I fought each other for the Percy Jacksons, there was one volume which she had from 7am-8:30am, and 3:30pm-8pm whilst I had it from 830am-3:30pm, and 8pm-7am. Two bookmarks obviously.

And I love the Captain Underpants books, which I'm now re-reading all over again to DS.

I would like to claim that the Artemis Fowls are DD's fault, but unfortunately I just picked them up on my own behalf in the children's section while waiting for her to choose, and I'm now racing through them without her getting anywhere near them Blush.

DandyDan · 15/09/2010 22:59

BelligerentGhoul - the one about the boy* in a hut was 'What I Was' or something - that was annoying and predictable; Just in Case's main character was full of himself, and the latest, The Bride's Farewell is Hardy-'Tess' lite-lite with an extra dose of 'lite' and another annoying main character. I found How I Live Now was a real stand-out, not perfect but pretty extraordinary.

pranma · 15/09/2010 23:15

The Inkheart trilogy by Cornelia Funke
Another vote for Diana Wynne Jones
re-read all your childhood favourites-Abbey Girls,chalet School,Pullein Thompson pony books
The Hobbit
Malcolm Saville's Witchend books
Pamela Brown's Blue Doors
most Noel Streatfield
anything by Antonia Forest [if you can find them now]
I could go on.....

DinahRod · 15/09/2010 23:16

Ariesgirl, I gave my box set of The Wind on Fire trilogy by William Nicholson away, I just didn't understand the allure.

Goodnight Mr Tom
Ballet Shoes
Secret Garden
Little Princess
Journey to the River Sea
Holes
Pullman Trilogy
Capt Underpants
Arabel's Raven (despite the criminal typos and grammar mistakes)

pranma · 15/09/2010 23:18

Big endorsement for 'The Dark is Rising' I re-read it regularly and the early Alan Garner books-Weirdstone of Brisingamen and Moon of Gomrath-there are so many lovely books out there.
What a great thread this is :)

DandyDan · 15/09/2010 23:31

I wasn't going to mention the Pamela Brown 'Blue Doors' but that was one of my re-read favourites (well, the first in the series anyway). I remember the BBC drama of the same. 'Jeremy' is now an award-winning director of films/TV dramas in the UK.

muttimalzwei · 15/09/2010 23:41

The Spook's Apprentice series by Joseph Delaney! That was my English teacher!!! Does anyone know what order they are read in?
CS Lewis Narnia anyone?

sunnydelight · 16/09/2010 07:45

How funny, as soon as I saw the thread title I thought of the Cherub books. DS1 has just got the last one and I am waiting to read it. I've also really enjoyed the Edge Chronicles and the Harry Potter books - because both my boys are dyslexic I ended up reading to them longer than you normally would and it was so much easier if it was something interesting!

YohoAhoy · 16/09/2010 07:54

DD is currently reading anything she can find with horses in.

She read one the other week and said it was excellent, but very sad, and said I would like it. It was Blind Beauty by K.M. Peyton.

Sad?! Gah, I was traumatised.

Now want to read Flambards. So I She will order through the library. Grin