The Books I Read When I Was Young That I Would Still Read Now
My homeboy Surya got me thinking about a lot of the things I read as a kid and there were a few books that stood out to me in the conversation, or rather they were the ones that bubbled up to the surface from so long ago. So here's a list of some of the books or series of books that influenced me as I was growing up.
Some I found in the library at school, others were bought from the old Scholastic Fairs that would come to school for a week or two, and others were found at the library we'd go to every weekend. I remember a reading program called "Book It" that was involved with all of the local libraries, Pizza Hut, Dairy Queen, and some bank in Oklahoma City at the time. If you read "x" number of books you got a prize, if you read "x" number of books higher, you got a better prize, so on and so forth. Needless to say, our mother got us hooked on that program pretty early on. We'd spend hours in our rooms reading. One could make the argument that she was a good mother by enrolling us in this program and fostering the good habit of reading at an early age; I think she just wanted a quiet house for longer than half an hour (we were noisy, argumentative kids...pains in the ass for sure).
Ul de Rico - "The Rainbow Goblins"
Probably one of the craziest books I've ever read in my entire life. Also one of the most spectacularly visual. De Rico not only wrote the book, but he painted every page within. That's his art that you're reading AND seeing. Imagine that there are 7 goblins in the world, each a different color of the rainbow. Now imagine that these goblins survive by drinking up the pigment of rainbows that appear after storms. They catch the color in nets and drink it up like alcoholics. Now imagine that the undergrowth and root system of the natural world hears about your plan to steal the next rainbow and hatches a plot to save the rainbow so you can't have it. This is that book. Here's just one of the many, many gorgeous pictures from inside:
Alfred Hitchcock and the Three Investigators / The Hardy Boys
This was a fun series of books. Three friends, who kept their "Headquarters" in a junkyard, investigate mysteries. The books were pretty longish for kids books of the time, but I'm almost positive I read every one of them. Every time we went to the library, I'd try to find more that I hadn't read before. Now I'm on the hunt to find them online and buy them all up again, but it looks like they're quite the collector's items and haven't been reissued. Not only did I read these, but I read almost all the old Hardy Boys books, Nancy Drew, and had nearly all the Choose Your Own Adventure books too. Now I wish I had held onto them all when we moved to Kansas City.
Shel Silverstein - "Where the Sidewalk Ends"
This book was forever checked out of the school library. If it was ever on the shelf, it wasn't there long. It wouldn't surprise me if this book had been checked out by every reading-aged kid in the school at least twice, if not three times. Some of the greatest pieces of poetry, limericks, and hilarious pictures to show up in kid lit. Shel Silverstein was a scary looking dude but wrote some really great stuff.
Norton Juster - "The Phantom Tollbooth"
God, this book was so good. A bored kid one day finds a box in his bedroom. In it, he finds a car and a tollbooth. He drives the car through the tollbooth and finds himself in a nonsensical world based on grammar, syntax, and proper use of English. In a strange way, this book is a very teachable one in that it actually helps to solidify a lot of the rules of English in the reader's brain while remaining an entertaining story. This will be required reading when I finally (if ever) have kids.
Donald J. Sobol - "Encyclopedia Brown"
Apparently I had a thing for detective novels as a kid. Encyclopedia Brown was a super attentive boy who helps people around his neighborhood by solving minor crimes. The books were broken up into three separate (and sometimes interrelated) stories. Each story ended before the case was solved, leaving the reader to attempt to solve the puzzle (though the solutions were in the back of the book). I think I read all of these as well.
I think I read Stuart Little 50 times when I was a kid.
When I saw the movie it felt like someone took a shit on my childhood.
i laugh at the phrasing but definitely not the sentiment. i never read the stuart little book, but i totally get it.
Awesome post. I gotta check out The Rainbow Goblins- the artwork looks really cool! I read the Hardy Boys when I was younger and learned to read with Compton's Encyclopedia.
I met Shel Silverstein, by the way, in Haight Ashbury in '66. he drew me a picture of a TR-3 that was parked on the corner (wish I still had it) He didn't sign it though.
it's a phenomenal book. got a copy of it for both of my nieces, though my sister was real dubious about it. there's a follow up called "the white goblin" as well, which is pretty stark and depressing as well, but equally beautiful.
silverstein had quite the mind on him. lucky you got to meet him!
I was really impressed by the picture you put in your post... I'm going to see if I can find a copy.
Rainbow Goblins sounds amazing. I want to read that now. Shel Silverstein's books were so popular at my school that it was frustrating because they were always "in use" at the library. Never did own one. Scary Stories to Tell in The Dark was another favorite of mine. I also read the Nancy Drew series. LOVED the action/adventure/mysteries. Sometimes I still have the urge to read them for nostalgia sake. Maybe I will try the Hardy Boys this time around.
literally the same! his books were ALWAYS checked out and for the entire checkout period available. super annoying.
and yeah...the rainbow goblins is a great read.
OMG I totally forgot about "Book it" and honestly, I never knew it wasnt just in Canada! Thats awesome! I got SO MANY personal pizzas from pizza hut it was ridiculous!! I read girlier books as a kid like Riding Academy, Sweet Valley High, Ramona and Bezus, etc, but I also went on to Goosebumps, The "who killed peggy sue" books, and RL Stein books about cheerleaders lol I wish they had a program like "Book it" in place for kids now. My Mini has a love for reading at 6 years old and I think something like that would just encourage her all the more! I loved this post! Brought me back to my younger days! Thanks for posting!
my nieces would love a program like that. i don't think it exists anymore, which is a shame, but as the uncle who writes, i make sure they get plenty of books to read (and they do actually read them).
Thats awesome! Mini has tons of books and i love thats shes a bit of a nerd like me when it comes to reading! I hope she continues to grow her love for reading as she gets older. You live so many adventures when you read♡
hello there, great post, that "book it" program sure sounds like an excellent idea to encourage kids and young people to read. wish i had something like that in my country... Anyways, that first book "The Rainbow Goblins" sure looks interesting, those visuals can caught the eye, i'll definitely give it a look. i'm new to steemit, just registered, so feel free to take a look on my blog, i'll be posting content soon enough. have a nice day(:
it's a beautiful book with every page being a piece of art. i think you'd enjoy it! :)