Aww--
she took my answer. LOVED those books.
When I was about 8,
From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler. Gosh, how I wanted to live close enough to NYC to run away and live in the museum-- but I recall feeling that Claudia had
no idea what real motivation was. LOL.
I also loved Susan Cooper's
The Dark is Rising sequence when I was about that same age. I loved all of Andre Norton's 'magic' books and read those obsessively when I was around 6-7.
The first book I recall assuming proportions of being "much more than a book" was
The Velveteen Rabbit. I remember reading that one before kindergarten and just feeling so heartbroken for the boy's loss. It was years before I could feel "happy" for the rabbit.
I loved Nancy Drew beginning when I was around five, I recall; she seemed so confident and in control of things-- I really liked that.
The most meaningful of all of my childhood reading experiences was probably George MacDonald's classic
The Princess and the Goblin. I loved the deeper themes in that book, and I re-read it time and time again, getting something new out of it each time. I don't remember when I first read it, but it was before third grade, so I must have been six or seven. Even as an adult, I've enjoyed reading it aloud to DD (but she prefers the similar
Tale of Desperaeux).
I had a real need for escapist literature, and for anything that could show me protagonists that were strong and self-sufficient... and not very social, for that matter.
Oh!! I know!
Great Expectations. I first read it when I was way too young for the book (I'm thinking about 9?), and it moved me to tears. I sobbed and sobbed-- both with sadness and (a first) with happiness for Pip. It gave me such a sense of hope-- tempered by reality. It was gritty and messy, which tallied with what I knew of real life and how it teases us and takes away as it gives. I've not met anyone else for whom that book means what it means to me-- it was like
The Velveteen Rabbit in a way. Definitely the right book at the right time.
I recall reading
Dandelion Wine when I was WAY too young for that book-- I was terrified to come into a darkened house until I was well into my 20s. I think I was about 8 or 9.
When I was twelve, I discovered the recently published
The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy; it was like a revelation. Finally, I had proof that there
were other people like me. At least one of them, anyway-- because if Douglas Adams existed, as he must, then it meant that I was not a perfect singularity. I had been having these bizarre existential thoughts in my head since I was three or four-- when I didn't have good words to describe things like 'theory of mind' even.
Of those books, Douglas Adams is the only one thus far that has captured my DD in the same way. She clearly isn't drive by escapist themes in quite the same way I was.
I think that I mentioned reading
The Bell Jar elsewhere. I was about 10-12 when I read it, and that was
wayyy too young. It was scary, scary stuff, that book-- I had a schizoaffective family member, so it hit me VERY hard. On the other hand, I was perhaps 'scared straight' by some of it, I don't know. As an adult, reading
A Beautiful Mind left me sobbing, and still brings tears to my eyes for the same reasons.
I read a number of books that I cannot recall titles/authors for, and therefore have no way of recapturing other than by happy accident. I recall plot extremely well, but not names.