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[Closed] Favourite book from your childhood? (proper childhood, not teenage years!)

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I can't think of a better one than this for me; stupid as though it may sound, I felt almost there, hunting after chickens!

[img] [/img]

Edited for correct issue pic 😀


 
Posted : 30/04/2014 8:45 pm
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Danny The Champion of the World.
Or Brendan Chase.


 
Posted : 30/04/2014 8:48 pm
 ton
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stig of the dump
kes
brair rabbit


 
Posted : 30/04/2014 8:48 pm
 timc
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Go dog go


 
Posted : 30/04/2014 8:50 pm
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I liked the Famous 5.

There was also a sci-fi book, about a kid in the future, he had a robot, and a dog, and the dog wasn't allowed on the bed. That's all I remember about it! But I liked that one too.


 
Posted : 30/04/2014 8:50 pm
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Stig of the dump here too.

And this

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 30/04/2014 8:53 pm
 Crag
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The Magic Faraway Tree by Enid Blyton for me.


 
Posted : 30/04/2014 8:57 pm
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Danny Champion of the World. Read it again last year, it's still brilliant.


 
Posted : 30/04/2014 8:57 pm
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Miss pepperpots outing


 
Posted : 30/04/2014 9:02 pm
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Another Stig fan here.

Also Coral Island and The Hobbit.


 
Posted : 30/04/2014 9:03 pm
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Elmer the elephant.


 
Posted : 30/04/2014 9:08 pm
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Biggles.


 
Posted : 30/04/2014 9:09 pm
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The adventure series by Willard Price
The Hobbit
Near enough everything by Roald Dahl
Swallows & Amazons etc
Stig of the dump
The machine gunners
Friday's Tunnel
The Bogwoppits
The Bulldog Drummond series by Sapper
The ghosts of Motley hall
The iron man

Liked a book or two when I was a kid 🙂


 
Posted : 30/04/2014 9:11 pm
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The Machine Gunners and James and the Giant Peach


 
Posted : 30/04/2014 9:12 pm
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James and the Giant Peach was my first proper book that I loved, around the same time as a couple of Alan Garner books, The Weirdstone of Brisingaman and Elidor. Books seemed to be so wonderful back then


 
Posted : 30/04/2014 9:13 pm
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+1 for The Magic Faraway Tree.

Captured my imagination for years. Still even think about it from time to time. Will be introducing it to my youngest son when he's old enough.


 
Posted : 30/04/2014 9:14 pm
 LoCo
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Great little engines, Rev Audrey


 
Posted : 30/04/2014 9:14 pm
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Hungry caterpillar...the colours etc are still amazing now when I read it to my 16 monther


 
Posted : 30/04/2014 9:15 pm
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Conrad's War. Only book I ever read twice as a kid.


 
Posted : 30/04/2014 9:15 pm
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Oh yes Yossi i'd forgotten about the Willard price Adventures, was it the Hardy twins or am I confusing that with something else?


 
Posted : 30/04/2014 9:18 pm
 spw3
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Danny Champion of the World
The Willard Price books
The Boy Next Door by Enid Blyton

I think books like these need to be read by the time you are ten or you miss the window.


 
Posted : 30/04/2014 9:21 pm
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Bottersnikes and Gumbles.
Agaton Sax.


 
Posted : 30/04/2014 9:31 pm
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I missed out on Roald Dahl, they were just coming out in the seventies just after I'd moved on to older books. Loved reading them with my kids though. We were big library users and didn't have many books of our own. I rember loving Richard Scarry big books of facts and puzzles, and a great book called The Golden Bug about chasing a stolen Bugatti across Europe.


 
Posted : 30/04/2014 9:32 pm
 tang
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Dahl and Willard Price. Bit of Blyton, only the 'Adventure' series. Tintin was also huge for me, Asterix a bit later. Tolkien from about 7 or 8.


 
Posted : 30/04/2014 9:33 pm
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There was one with tigers and pancakes. But that was a long time ago!


 
Posted : 30/04/2014 9:36 pm
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Danny champ


 
Posted : 30/04/2014 9:49 pm
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Oh yes Yossi i'd forgotten about the Willard price Adventures, was it the Hardy twins or am I confusing that with something else?

Hal & Roger Hunt. They're quite funny reading now - Hal is an insufferable know-it-all whilst Roger is a foolhardy goon who (by the last few books) is a real life Dr Doolittle... I loved them, especially Amazon, South Sea & Volcano Adventure.

I would love to find a copy of Willard Price's autobiography - I read it at school but it's long out of print. He visited getting on for 200 countries in his lifetime working for National Geographic (and possibly the CIA?!)


 
Posted : 30/04/2014 9:49 pm
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Absolutely loved this book as a child.

Over 40 years later I can still almost remember the sequence of animals involved.

Superb

[URL= http://i259.photobucket.com/albums/hh284/Baron_Von_Drais/514SEDPK6TL_zps2ec03e9e.jp g" target="_blank">http://i259.photobucket.com/albums/hh284/Baron_Von_Drais/514SEDPK6TL_zps2ec03e9e.jp g"/> [/IMG][/URL]


 
Posted : 30/04/2014 9:53 pm
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Anything by Roald Dahl, anything Just William.


 
Posted : 30/04/2014 9:54 pm
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[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 30/04/2014 9:56 pm
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embarrassing, but, when I was really little... Barbapapa
then another +1 for Magic Faraway Tree
then Secret 7 / Famous 5 later on


 
Posted : 30/04/2014 10:00 pm
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The little wooden horse.

I've still got it too.


 
Posted : 30/04/2014 10:03 pm
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Danny Champion of the World
Charlie and the Chocolate Factory
Swallows and Amazons
Famous Five (and most other Enid Blyton books)
Stig of the Dump
The Iron Man
Prof Branestawm
TinTin
Mumfie (TBH I fancied the girl called Selina)
The Reluctant Vampire
Flat Stanley


 
Posted : 30/04/2014 10:03 pm
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Asterix the Gaul
anything by Richard Scarry just for the pictures
Boy by Roald Dahl


 
Posted : 30/04/2014 10:05 pm
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The Twits 😀


 
Posted : 30/04/2014 10:08 pm
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Big Ted Little Ted.
The Ladybird guide to Home Safety
The ladybird - Nursery Rhyme book.
Little Red Hen
Arthur Ransome
something about HMS Thule
And pretty much everything else already mentioned.


 
Posted : 30/04/2014 10:09 pm
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Michael Moorcock - The Ice Schooner is the only book that has stuck with me. I read loads of other 1960s pulp tat.


 
Posted : 30/04/2014 10:11 pm
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All of the Willard Price adventure books, spent endless days indulging my inner naturalist

Brer Rabbit books, just awesome.

Rupert annuals, still love the artwork today, can't get rid...

my father's old eagle Annuals, Dan Dare etc

Nancy Drew Mysteries

The Coral Island - R Ballantyne

Gran's massive Art Deco era book for children - full of weirdness, Edward Lear etc


 
Posted : 30/04/2014 10:12 pm
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I remeber Dennis The Dragon being a particular favourite due to great artwork very early on. The Enchanted Wood and The Faraway Tree i loved. I remeber enjoying all the Dragonfall 5 series by Brian Earnshaw. Of course there was the ladybird books series (don't know if there still around?)

There were some books we read at school that enjoyed but I'm struggling to remeber. Carrie's War, Stig Of The Dump etc.

A bit later, say 7 or 8, and I discovered Tolkien and A. C. Clarke and never looked back.

Ah just remembered the Fighting Fantasy series by Jackson & livingstone. I think one of them two went onto found Games Workshop.


 
Posted : 30/04/2014 10:16 pm
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Wow, amazed I wasn't the only one to remember the Adventure series - lots of one-dimensional villains (either big brutish bullies or two-faced sneaks) and a boatload of anthropomorphism, but I wanted to be the third Hunt brother when I was a kid.

And great shout on the Fighting Fantasy books - I had the first twenty or so before my enthusiasm ran out of steam. Still got.... Way Of The Samurai or something?


 
Posted : 30/04/2014 10:48 pm
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Gormenghast.

Steerpikes still a Machiavellian hero to me.


 
Posted : 30/04/2014 10:50 pm
 PTR
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From primary school, read by the head master, "the house of 60 fathers"


 
Posted : 30/04/2014 10:59 pm
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The 3 detectives series by Alfred Hitchcock. Loved them.


 
Posted : 30/04/2014 11:06 pm
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Tintin, Three Investigators, Hardy Boys (though not so keen on them), anything Asimov or Arthur C Clarke.

One book I borrowed over and over from the library was Flight Underground by James Hamilton-Paterson. Eventually the librarian just ripped the ticket out of the dpd don't and gave me the book - I still have it.


 
Posted : 30/04/2014 11:12 pm
 Nick
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[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 30/04/2014 11:16 pm
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I found my copy of this last year, almost cried tbh, talk about a link to the past

[img] [/img]

Also the Very Hungry Caterpillar, and some other thing which I don't remember quite as well but could be summed up as A Total Radge Butterfly Fights Everything In The World (But Pure Shites It Off A Whale, Fair Dos Though, I Wouldn't Fight A ****in Whale Neither)

Though, it might not have been a butterfly. Definitely a whale though.


 
Posted : 30/04/2014 11:28 pm
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A Total Radge Butterfly Fights Everything In The World (But Pure Shites It Off A Whale, Fair Dos Though, I Wouldn't Fight A ****in Whale Neither)

T'was a ladybird. The Bad Tempered Ladybird . . .

[img] http://www.images-chapitre.com/ima2/newbig/513/27298513_8428027.jp g" target="_blank">http://www.images-chapitre.com/ima2/newbig/513/27298513_8428027.jp g"/> [/img]


 
Posted : 30/04/2014 11:46 pm
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I forgot Noggin the Nog.

Still have em.


 
Posted : 30/04/2014 11:52 pm
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mamadirt - Member

T'was a ladybird. The Bad Tempered Ladybird

That makes more sense. Cheers!


 
Posted : 01/05/2014 2:12 pm
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The Machine Gunners

The Amazing Mr Blunden

My scrapbook which I have rediscovered and contains a lot of pictures of carpets and rugs . Redicutt carpets were big in our town.


 
Posted : 01/05/2014 3:06 pm
 DezB
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I know which mine were, cos I've kept them! Must have intended to read them to my own child.
So far have tried
Professor Branstawm: "Boring"
Stig of the Dump: "Boring"
Kids these days eh?!

Still got The Little Captain, The Machine Gunners, Born Free, Charlie & the Chocolate Factory (he's read that).

All bought from some book club we had at primary school.


 
Posted : 01/05/2014 3:19 pm
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All the Jennings books by Anthony Buckeridge.
All the Biggles and Famous Five stuff too.

I Am David by Anne Holme.
Anything by Ian Serraillier, but 'There's No Escape' was my favourite.

When I was really little there was series about a little train called Chuffa - they were brilliant and the memory of reading them with my mum still sets me off.

There was a little book about a Mini Pickup called 'Reddy At The Racetrack' and another about a donkey called Antonio which have a similar effect.


 
Posted : 01/05/2014 3:29 pm
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I don't think anyone's mentioned Winnie the Pooh. That was my favourite, and I was dead chuffed when my son loved having me read Winnie the Pooh and The House at Pooh Corner to him.


 
Posted : 01/05/2014 5:41 pm
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I remember the Hal and Roger Adventure books, I read them all, and the Hardy Boys mysteries.


 
Posted : 01/05/2014 5:50 pm
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Matilda
All the Rev Awdry Thomas the Tank Engine books.


 
Posted : 01/05/2014 5:52 pm
 dti
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Seraffin


 
Posted : 01/05/2014 6:00 pm
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Any of the Tintin books, but particularly 'The Secret of the Unicorn'

'Spitfire Parade' (Biggles)

Enjoyed Arthur Ransome but 'Pigeon Post' was favourite.

Most of the Dr Seuss books plus 'Put Me in the Zoo' by Lopshire was a fave when little.

All frightfully middle class no doubt.

As usual - can't really remember until reminded by someone else's post.


 
Posted : 01/05/2014 6:07 pm
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Anything by Enid Blyton or a bit later on the Fighting Fantasy things - if you could have shown 11 yr old me something like The Eldar Scrolls as I sat with my pencil and dice trying to resist keeping a finger on the previous page god knows what I'd have said!


 
Posted : 01/05/2014 6:20 pm
 MSP
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I remember reading Elidor and another Alan Garner book, I think I was a bit young for them at the time, they proper spooked me out.


 
Posted : 01/05/2014 6:35 pm
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The Magic Faraway Tree - Enid Blyton.


 
Posted : 01/05/2014 7:02 pm
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[img] [/img]

Most especially [i]The Eagle of the Ninth[/i].


 
Posted : 01/05/2014 7:07 pm
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I'm just reading the Rosemary Sutcliffe books for the first time!

Good, aren't they?


 
Posted : 01/05/2014 7:09 pm
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Good, aren't they?

They are ace - and probably responsible for me (eventually) becoming an archaeologist. 😀

Plus honorary mentions for Susan Cooper's [i]The Dark is Rising[/i] and Alan Garner's [i]The Owl Service[/i]. Superb books.


 
Posted : 01/05/2014 7:15 pm
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My favourite book pre teens was a very old "Encyclopedia of Aviation" given to me by the next door neighbour. All World War 1 and cable controls. Fascinating stuff.


 
Posted : 01/05/2014 7:16 pm
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All the Enid Blyton and Roald Dahl ones. Tintin, Asterix for stuff with pictures. Read a lot of sci-fi when I was a kid. Mostly Arthur C Clarke and Asimov. I found them quite confusing though.

And those ones where they have you turn to a page based on your choice. I loved those! What are they called? Choose your own adventure or something?


 
Posted : 01/05/2014 7:21 pm
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IvanDobski - Member

if you could have shown 11 yr old me something like The Eldar Scrolls as I sat with my pencil and dice trying to resist keeping a finger on the previous page god knows what I'd have said!

We invented the quicksave!


 
Posted : 01/05/2014 7:23 pm
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Another vote for the Magic Faraway Tree here. Read it till I wore out the words.


 
Posted : 01/05/2014 7:28 pm
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[url= http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Borrible_Trilogy ]The Borribles: Across The Dark Metropolis by Michael De Larrabeiti[/url]

It was the last of a trilogy, I read them over and over but this was my favorite. Amazing books. I've never met anyone else who's read it so I'd be interested if anyone here has.

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 01/05/2014 7:30 pm
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The Magic Porridge Pot is a great call! I'd forgotten that.

I remember one now about a chair, that grew little wings...what the heck was it called?


 
Posted : 01/05/2014 7:31 pm
 MSP
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Can anyone remember a book, where luddites had taken over England, and I think the hero's (a boy, a girl and an adult?) were trying to escape to France?


 
Posted : 01/05/2014 7:34 pm
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Forgot 'The Guardians' by John Christopher.

A great little adventure story - 1984 for kids.


 
Posted : 01/05/2014 7:36 pm
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The Machine Gunners
The Pigman
The Silver Sword


 
Posted : 01/05/2014 7:40 pm
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Can anyone remember a book, where luddites had taken over England, and I think the hero's (a boy, a girl and an adult?) were trying to escape to France?

Do you mean The Weathermonger (1968), Heartsease (1969) and The Devil's Children (1970)by Peter Dickinson? I had those - really enjoyed them. Televised as The Changes.


 
Posted : 01/05/2014 8:46 pm
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I used to get given Encyclopedia for kids, and books on prehistoric stuff and wildlife, still got some around, and it treasured a little book called, I think, The Adventures of Toby Twirl, which had brilliant illustrations. Still upstairs somewhere, a bit battered now, though. Then I found Secret Seven, Famous Five and Swallows and Amazons.
Still have the books, and I was delighted to discover all of Arthur Ransom's books in iBooks, so I'm gradually getting the whole set of S&A books on my pad.
Discovered SF at senior school, EE 'Doc' Smith, Arthur C Clark, and that was it, pretty much all I read after that.
Still do.
Just done a quick Google, and there were a lot more Toby Twirl books around than I'd ever realised when I was little, feel sadly deprived, now 🙁
http://www.tobytwirl.co.uk/TT%20Books.htm
This is the one I still have:

[img] [/img]

1950 edition, so four years before I was born, it must have been given to me by a relation at sometime, amazed it's survived over sixty years!


 
Posted : 01/05/2014 9:18 pm
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Ah, I'd forgotten "Bottersnikes and Gumbles" and "Flat Stanley". I also loved "Gobelino the Witch's Cat", "Fattypuffs and Thinnifers" and the Uncle books, tho in hindsight Uncle was a fascist snob.


 
Posted : 01/05/2014 9:22 pm
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Mr Greedy

In the night kitchen (Maurice Sendak)


 
Posted : 01/05/2014 9:28 pm
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The Pobble who had no toes. We named our cat after aunt Jobiska...

[img] [/img]


 
Posted : 01/05/2014 9:44 pm
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+1 for'The Weirdstone of Brisingaman' I've still got my original copy. I loved the Secret Seven series and used to love going into town on a Saturday to visit the library for some Just William books.
Happy Days indeed. 🙂


 
Posted : 02/05/2014 12:08 am
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Pretty much all of the above! I read a lot... Still read Brendan Chase every couple of years - some almost poetic passages. Came to Swallows and Amazon's quite late and read all of them through a few feverish bed-ridden months. Just William books were standard bedtime reading. Dianna Wynne Jones wrote a series of fantasy- comedy type things which I re-read several times.

Absolute favourite though, was The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar - still very readable now I'm 40 🙂


 
Posted : 02/05/2014 12:18 am
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One of the few books I brought out to Australia with me was this one.
[img] [/img]
Read it when I was about 9 or 10 I think. I just had another look through it as I remembered some great drawings and prints in it.
[img] [/img]
[img] [/img]
[img] [/img]

Before that I had gone through Roald Dahl with probably the witches being my favourite, just for that slightly darker edge. CS Lewis Narnia series and I seem to remember something on Beowulf but I can't really remember what.


 
Posted : 02/05/2014 12:23 am
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