Books at Bedtime: Family Reading

Friday, July 20th, 2007

pileofbooks2.jpgI would like to draw your attention to this Family Reading page on The Horn Book’s website – there are lots of ideas and shared experiences to hearten and encourage reading with and to our children. I especially love Martha Parravano’s article Reading Three Ways about reading with her two daughters; and I laughed aloud at the end. It reminded me of a holiday when Son Number One was still toddling. Rapunzel had been the perpetually chosen audio tape on the day’s drive up to the North of Scotland. A few days later:

    Daddy: Where’s Mummy?
    Son (cackling): The bird has flown, my pretty!

…I wish I’d actually been there to hear it!

Thinking back to that time when books had to be repeated ad infinitum, here’s a list, in no particular order, of only some of our family favorites from the very early years:

    All the Hairy Maclary books by Lynley Dodd – in fact, all her books!
    Owl Babies by Martin Waddell, ill. Patrick Benson;
    Can’t You sleep, Baby Bear? – and the rest of the series, again by Martin Waddell, but ill. Barbara Firth
    Each Peach Pear Plum and Peepo! by Janet and Allan Ahlberg
    Mrs Armitage and the Big Wave by Quentin Blake
    We’re Going on a Bear Hunt by Michael Rosen, ill. Helen Oxenbury
    Little Beaver and the Echo by Amy MacDonald, ill. Sarah Fox-Davies
    The Very Hungry Caterpillar by Eric Carle
    Green Eggs and Ham by Dr Seuss
    The Gruffalo and all the other books by Julia Donaldson, ill. Axel Scheffler
    Mrs Goose’s Baby and Mr Davies and the Baby by Charlotte Voake

When I look at this list I realise that nearly all these books were given to us by friends whose own children had loved them – and we in turn have handed them on to our smaller friends…

So let me just leave you with a something the illustrator Howard Pyle once said:

“The stories of childhood leave an indelible impression, and their author always has a niche in the temple of memory from which the image is never cast out to be thrown on the rubbish heap of things that are outgrown and outlived.”