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am i a lone in my intense hatred of that " we are going on a bear hunt" book?

233 replies

messagedeleted · 15/02/2006 13:38

i cant stand it
ds3loves it

OP posts:
PeachyClair · 16/02/2006 20:58

Our favourite:

Tiger who came to tea

Sister adored as a kid and I bought it for her a few years back at Christmas but never made it that far

CorduroyAngel · 16/02/2006 21:20

Hi, my first posting on this site! I can't stand any books with long paragraphs as my little ones won't wait for me to read them and they just turn the pages... so I like Elmer's Weather - fun, short and thick card so it can't be torn! Having said all that, they both LOVED 'Room On The Broom' as it rhymes and it's well illustrated... and I still enjoy reading it even after well over 40 reads!

Clary · 16/02/2006 22:08

Oh MI Run away from SCARY pants that has to be shouted out in our house.
I love that book. I recall dd at about 2 and a bit sitting "reading" it to herself on the sofa (she knew it off by heart of course, couldn't read at 2 I hasten to add before you all think I'm some hideous hot-housing mother...
I am also with you all in my hatred of the Mr Men books, they don't rhyme or appeal in any way, too long and not at all interesting. Kids love em of course. Am I the only person who shortens them as I go? (Luckily no-one reads well enough here to know!)

fullmoonfiend · 17/02/2006 09:04

Peachy, love Tiger who came to tea too! I know it off by heart as before thomastook over our world, the ds's both loved it. Do you find yourself adopting a bizarre 1950's BBC voice to read it? Or is it just me

fullmoonfiend · 17/02/2006 09:07

By the way, if anyone has Pass the Jam, Jim, I found it works well sung to the tune of 'Glorious things of thee are spoken'...bizarre the things you come up with when faced with reading a book for the trillionth time

suzywong · 17/02/2006 09:07

I do 50s voices in the style of the Muffin The Mule presenter as often as I can, ds1 quite likes it and it makes it slightly more interesting for me

suzywong · 17/02/2006 09:09

Yes I know the Little Wooden Farmer, should be getting that soon
My parents were avid children's book collectors and I have finally persuaded them to send me most of ones suitable for my kids' age group. It will cost a bomb and come by sea but it's very important to keep the reading alive.

sestius · 17/02/2006 10:16

try "Duck for President" from the states. V funny.
Do you think children's books which make us cry are cynical marketing aimed at us rather than children? Because all the real classics I can think of have one bit which has me reaching for the hanky - the baby otter being found by Pan in Wind in the Willows, Christopher Robin telling Pooh he's got to grow up now but will always love him (WAAAAAAH! even while rational part of me is thinking "Goody and get your hair cut too") ekt ekt

SorenLorensen · 17/02/2006 10:23

On a previous thread about children's books someone said they do the Tiger's voice (in TWCTT) in the style of Leslie Phillips ("well, hellair there"). I'd thought it was only me who did that!

fullmoonfiend · 17/02/2006 11:53

LOL! (I've always opted for a hearty Brian Blessed, but leslie Phillips is much better)

clerkKent · 17/02/2006 13:36

SorenLorenson

DS loves Dr Seuss. There is an offer of a poster if you collect 6 tokens from Dr Seuss books - we got that (not worth it though). I still have
"Cat in the Hat Dictionary in French" from the 1960's - it must be the only book fom my childhood that I still have.

Hate Mr Men (does anyone like them?). I also hate and refuse to read any Goosebumps.

mszebra · 17/02/2006 14:12

DS1's class did so much work based on the Bear Hunt book that he's quite bored with it, now. I hate books with lots of repetitive text (what's the point? I refuse to read it).

I find the Gruffalo books pretty uninteresting/unoriginal. Can't see what the big deal was.

I HATED Dr. Seuss books as a kid. The rhyming hurt my head to try to understand (I had an advanced reading age, too). DH loved the books, though.

Seusss (whatever his real name was) lived in my home town. It was a bragging point in the playground if you could say you'd actually seen his GRINCH car license plate. But there is a book with text by him illustrated by someone else after his death (My Many Coloured Days) which I quite like.

DD & I both like Percy the ParkKeeper & Lynly Dodd ...DS1 was obsessed with Slinki Malinki for a few years. Postman Pat books are terrific if you get tapes from the library. So completely parochrial (sp?)!!

ScarletA · 17/02/2006 17:57

Only fond of bear hunt for two reasons - one, our dog looks like the one in the story (and is just as wuss-y) and two because upon first reading it to 18 month old dd she burst into tears at the last page (sad bear going home, head down). She was beside herself, bless, but was first sign of now almost legendary EMPATHY my darling daughter has. Otherwise it is, like most kids books, boring after the seventy fifth reading.

I find most Julia Donaldson books a bit long... but my kids like them. But then they also like Mr Men books (fall asleep after three pages and on automatic pilot for the rest of the book) and anything with diggers in (die slowly and agonisingly of boredom) or fairies/ballerinas (die an even more lingerly devastating death). I am ashamed to admit it, but I often 'accidentally' turn two pages at a time of Dig Dig Digging. Ds will cotton on one day I know but if I religiously keep doing it, maybe he will never ever realise? I think the only book I will happily read (I know, I know, I am a cow) is Slinky Malinki which is just pure poetry and Tiger who came to Tea.

Talking about books we all had as kids, does anyone remember Go Dog Go? I still have our childhood copy and my Mum is pleased that it has come to haunt me in the same way as it did her. It is hideously boring and I admit I have hidden it behind the book shelf on many occasions, but they always manage to find it.
Does anyone remember Polly and the Wolf stories? Can't wait until mine are big enough. My Mum loved reading them to us so they must be good.

As for Ant and Bee. Wow. Don't remember what they were about but the mere mention of those books take me back 35 years to the musty, sunny colonial library in Africa where we used to borrow them. Lovely memory.

WideWebWitch · 17/02/2006 18:06

Oh suzywong, I so agree with you about the Disney Ladybird books, I detest them and bin them as soon as I decently can. Owl Babies, how can anyone not like Owl Babies? But I think dd especially likes it because I've been away and now I'm back and the mummy in Owl Babies CAME BACK! The ones that are really getting on my nerves atm are dd's Christmas presents, one with a ticklemonster and another 2 from that Axel person I think with pull out things that don't pull out very well - the one with hairy pears and the other one with a wombat in a bath hat. I think they may get Lost soon, my heart sinks whenever dd brings them over.

messagedeleted · 17/02/2006 18:08

yes owl babies still crap

OP posts:
lockets · 17/02/2006 18:11

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hellywobs · 17/02/2006 18:52

George and the Dragon by Chris Wormell is fantastic. Also the Big Bear/Little Bear books.

Saker · 17/02/2006 20:10

Harry the Dirty Dog was one of my favourites as a child and I still love reading it now. Can't stand that awful Big Bear Little Bear - so wet. Not keen on a bear hunt either. At the moment we like the Frog books by Max Velthuijs.

maximillion · 17/02/2006 20:18

Any of the Noddy books is hell... we have one with sound effect buttons about Mr Straw's barn burning down. His 'oo-aarr Noddy' farmer soundbite has taken on a new meaning after Brokeback Mountain...

FrannyandZooey · 17/02/2006 20:30

The Tiger has a sort of strangulated Mr. Bean voice in my rendition of him. The Cat in the Hat sounds a bit Leslie Phillips, though.

lockets · 17/02/2006 20:33

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WharfRat · 17/02/2006 20:36

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pottle · 17/02/2006 21:27

1st ever message on mumsnet - got drawn in by Ant and Bee, was keen to get them for ds's but was shocked also to find them on Abe books for £30.00+,
love sentimental old fashioned children's books ds's prefer Topsy and Tim and Thomas,
we all love Richard Scarry books tho. and Orlando the Marmalade cat.

Fodders · 18/02/2006 11:01

Loving this thread! DD1 is nearly 2.5yrs.

Books not allowed to cross our threshold:

  • anything Thomas / Noddy / Wiggles related

Books currently being hidden so we don't have to read them:

  • Bear hunt. Should have remained just an action rhyme thing. We used to recite this over and over whilst sleep training dd1 - too many painful memories of falling asleep on the floor next to dd's cot whilst she yelled.

Dh and I can tolerate:

  • Gruffalo. Gruffalo's child is rubbish and all the other books by that pair are deeply irritating.
  • Maisy books. Dd loves anything maisy with a passion but we get bored with them quickly.
  • Little Princess books - bit wary of them but "I want my potty" IS helping with potty training at the mo.

Can't wait for dd to be old enough to appreciate:

  • the Queen's knickers

In this house we all love:

  • anything charlie and lola, but especially "tomatoes"
  • hungry caterpillar
  • busy spider (also by eric carle, the hungry caterpillar man)
  • beautiful bananas (can't remember who wrote, but it's fun)
  • most pop-up books especially if there's a scary crocodile / wolf / bear in it
  • dear zoo

ps. found it quite hard to get nice books re: new siblings / babies. Found lots of books based around the situation where the older child doesn't like the baby / feels sad about new baby - I imagine these are useful when sibling-wars are in-action, but not helpful to read before new sib arrives.

Good neutral emotion / fun books to introduce the idea of a new sib BEFORE the baby arrives were:

  • What shall we do with the Boo Hoo Baby?
  • My New Baby, illustrated by Annie Kubler

...even though dd2 is 3M old - dd1 still loves these books - seems to help her to review what's been happening in our house recently!

Fodders · 18/02/2006 11:32

ps. Tiger coming to tea....what sort of whacky-mother says "come in" when there's a flippin' TIGER standing on the doorstep saying he's hungry!?!??! LOVE IT!

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