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#87018 - 10/10/10 11:39 AM
Re: The Ultimate Book Thread?
[Re: Violet]
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Member
Registered: 03/22/09
Posts: 188
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If you want a book that relates to giftedness, however, I would recommend Ender's Game by Orson Scott Card (although you may have seen or heard this recommendation a multitude of times). The book is about a young boy named Ender Wiggin who, from a misdeed he does, gets awarded with the promise of a military camp. He goes through rigorous treatment, but that's all I could summarize (I'm not finished yet...  ). However, the story is rather interesting. If you want something that gifted kids to relate to while probing the complexity of war, this is for you! Great suggestion. DD14 *loved* Ender's Game when she read it a few years ago, and liked one of the sequels, Ender's Shadow about as much. She read a few other ones but didn't like them as good as those two, but there are a bunch of different opportunities for sequels/prequels if your kid likes Ender's Game. I will, though, warn that this probably isn't the best series for kids under 10-11, even if they are on the reading level. When DD was into the series I looked into it, and there is a lot of Brutal Violence, a few sexual themes (maybe more in the other books), and about every curse word known to man (once again, I believe this was more in ender's shadow). I know some parents are fine with this, and it is a *Brilliant* book (probably still one of my daughter's favorite books), but I just wanted you to be aware that this was a book intended for Adults in the beginning and therefore isn't the greatest for all kids, especially the sensitive ones.
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#87764 - 10/21/10 03:11 PM
Re: The Ultimate Book Thread?
[Re: Val]
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Member
Registered: 10/24/08
Posts: 1167
Loc: NM
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I our never ending search for new books for DS7, I came across a copy of 20,000 leagues under the sea. DS loved it and has told everyone he knows that they should read it.
_________________________
Shari Mom to DS 10, DS 11, DS 13 Ability doesn't make us, Choices do!
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#88284 - 10/29/10 06:56 AM
Re: The Ultimate Book Thread?
[Re: Val]
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Member
Registered: 12/13/05
Posts: 7207
Loc: Connecticut
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I was recently chatting about my childrens//YA favorite books of all times. I will admit that some of these were 'read aloud' to DS14 at a much younger age, but I enjoyed and remembered them.
Lois Lowry books, such as: 1993 The Giver, winner of the 1994 Newbery Medal 2000 Gathering Blue 2004 Messenger 2006 Gossamer or by Jerry Spinelli, Stargirl 2000 Maniac Magee 1990 Loser 2002 or Bruce Coville's Series Magic Shop
The Monster's Ring. Aladdin (1989). ISBN 0671693891 Jeremy Thatcher, Dragon Hatcher. Aladdin (1992). ISBN 0671747827 Jennifer Murdley's Toad. Aladdin (1993). ISBN 0671794019 The Skull of Truth. Aladdin (1999). ISBN 0671023438 Juliet Dove, Queen of Love. Harcourt (2003). ISBN 0152045619 Space Brat 2: Blork's Evil Twin Space Brat 3: The Wrath of Squat Space Brat 4: Planet of the Dips Space Brat 5: The Saber-Toothed Poodnoobie Rod Albright Alien Adventures
Aliens Ate My Homework I Left My Sneakers in Dimension X The Search for Snout (Aliens Stole My Dad in the UK) Aliens Stole My Body
This batch is a bit tougher to chew: Annals of the Western Shore is a children's book series by Ursula K. Le Guin. Each book has different main characters and settings, but the books are linked by some recurring characters and locations. Gifts won the PEN Center USA 2005 Children's literature award.[1] Powers further won the 2008 Nebula Award for Best Novel. [2]
It consists of three books:
Gifts, 2004 Voices, 2006 Powers, 2007
Here's one lovely enough to read aloud to the whole family: Seedfolks (1997) is a novelette written by Paul Fleischman, and by Gail Carson Levine, Dave at Night (1999)
The Phantom Tollbooth is a children's adventure novel and a modern fairy tale published in 1961, written by Norton Juster and illustrated by Jules Feiffer, who wrote, A Barrel of Laughs, A Vale of Tears.
Madeleine L'Engle's A Wrinkle in Time? Love and More Love, Grinity
_________________________
Coaching available, at SchoolSuccessSolutions.com
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#90203 - 11/27/10 08:13 PM
Re: The Ultimate Book Thread?
[Re: Val]
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Member
Registered: 04/10/09
Posts: 283
Loc: twilightzone
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Secret Series by Bosch is a fun read for kids. It depends if your child is bothered by talks of death or not and bad guys. My DC didn't like bad guys last year but we've introduced them a bit and this year, not a problem at all. Really enjoyed the series.
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#90205 - 11/27/10 09:42 PM
Re: The Ultimate Book Thread?
[Re: Val]
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Member
Registered: 08/20/08
Posts: 847
Loc: New York
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lol DeHe, I can't figure out if DS is bothered by any of that stuff. He doesn't seem to be...but we haven't delved into certain things that I don't think he is ready for. Although he has read many books that I haven't yet. I just got him Phantom Tollbooth a couple days ago and he is almost done, and he is almost through the second book of the mysterious benedict society that he is reading with DH at night. We also read the george books and he really liked them a lot. We haven't read Harry Potter and some of those books though because I am not sure he is ready for that. It's so hard to know and I don't have time to read every book first.
Thanks Jesse, we may be brave and try it. Maybe I will order the first one and read it before Christmas and give it to him if I think it is okay. Is there actual death, or talk of death? Is there lots of violence?
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