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Joined:  May 2016 
Posts: 27  
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Junior Member 
Joined:  May 2016 
Posts: 27  | 
ultramarina, Thank you for your post.  I feel like I am in a very similar situation with my 10 yo DS.  His preference is fantasy.  Among the many already suggested including Enders Game, Hitchhikers, Rick Riordan series, Gregor series, Tolkien, my son has enjoyed:
  The Secrets of the Immortal Nicholas Flamel (6 Books) Michael Scott
  The Keepers (3 books so far...) Ted Sanders
  The Thickety (4 books)  J. A. White
  City of Ember (4 books) Jeanne DuPrau
  The Secret Keepers - Trenton Stewart Lee
  What If?: Serious Scientific Answers to Absurd Hypothetical Questions - Randall Munroe
  DS is currently finishing Watership Down.
  Keep the suggestions coming... lots of good new titles to research, thanks. 
 
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Joined:  Aug 2010 
Posts: 3,428  
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Joined:  Aug 2010 
Posts: 3,428  | 
Yes, he's read all of Redwall (this was a huge favorite and kept him busy for a long time! Thank you, Brian Jacques!) He read some Warriors, some Wings of Fire, and some Rick Riordan, but never loved them as much. City of Ember he has read and enjoyed. The Thickety--he just noticed there are some new ones and is excited to get to them. I'll look at the others! 
Last edited by ultramarina; 03/12/18 07:13 AM.
 
 
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Joined:  Dec 2016 
Posts: 24  
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Junior Member 
Joined:  Dec 2016 
Posts: 24  | 
I loved science fiction as a kid. My favorite author was Isaac Asimov. I think his stuff would be suitable, because they have interesting philosophical themes, but not a lot of romance etc. I also loved Arthur C Clarke. 
 
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Joined:  Dec 2016 
Posts: 24  
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Junior Member 
Joined:  Dec 2016 
Posts: 24  | 
Another cool book is Sophie's World, it's a fictional novel about the history of philosophy, but the main character is a teenage girl. It has a super cool plot twist in the middle. 
 
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Joined:  Mar 2017 
Posts: 42  
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Junior Member 
Joined:  Mar 2017 
Posts: 42  | 
I had already responded awhile ago, but just thought of another book that was inspirational to my 9-year old.  "A Long Walk to Water", though nonfiction, is told in more of a story narrative than.  It has some acts of violence, but the character was a child so I figured if he lived it, my child can read about it!  My son thoroughly enjoyed researching the authors current projects online afterward. 
 
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Joined:  Aug 2010 
Posts: 3,428  
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Joined:  Aug 2010 
Posts: 3,428  | 
Hi--I need more books! My son is frustrated with middle grade fantasy, commenting that he finds it boring/babyish. I find him rereading Calvin and Hobbes and Bloom County or other comedy books a lot. 
  I would like to thank you all for these past suggestions, some of which he loved (Summerland and the Schwa was Here were two hits that surprised me a bit). There was one big failure--he actually got upset at me for giving him Ender's Game (which I have never read). He said it was really disturbing and he hated it and wished he'd never read it. So, although he has read plenty of books with violence etc, apparently there is a level of disturbing that is too much for him and I need to be more careful. YA dystopia seems to be out.
  ETA: He is currently reading Anne of Green Gables, which he likes pretty well, but I'm not sure I see him progressing through the series. 
Last edited by ultramarina; 11/28/18 07:36 AM.
 
 
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Joined:  Apr 2014 
Posts: 4,084 Likes: 9  
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Joined:  Apr 2014 
Posts: 4,084 Likes: 9  | 
Dan Gutman's books (The Genius Files (series), Flashback Four (series), a variety of sports-related realistic fiction).  TGF has a nice road trip/US geography element to it, plus spies, GT protagonists.  FF has historical elements.  DG was a teacher (social studies, I think), which adds some fun factoid/edutainment qualities to his writing.
  Also, DC picked up Call of the Wild, and really enjoyed it.  This was in the midst of a similar Warriors/Redwall phase.
  We also liked the Asian Children's Favorite Stories series (Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Indian, etc.), which is a collection of folktales from traditional Asian cultures. (search Amazon for "children's favorite stories", and most of the series will come up) Beautiful illustrations, too.
  
 
  
...pronounced like the long vowel and first letter of the alphabet...
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Joined:  Feb 2012 
Posts: 756  
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Joined:  Feb 2012 
Posts: 756  | 
DS11 recently read and loved Watership Down, My Side of the Mountain trilogy, Old Yeller, and Savage Sam.  He is currently reading Call of the Wild and likes it.  
  I realize those aren’t off the beaten path but thought I’d mention them in case he hadn’t read them.  
  I have a ton of Anne McCaffrey novels that I’m holding off on for my son because of the romance elements.  
 
  
 
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