Here are some old children's books I have acquired. Please vote for which I should read next (or which I should avoid.) If you've read any of them, what did you think?

Poll #26528 Old Children's Book Poll
Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 129


Which books should I read next?

View Answers

Understood Betsy, by Dorothy Canfield Fisher. A girl is sent to rural Vermont and experiences country life.
32 (24.8%)

Building Blocks, by Cynthia Voigt. A boy time-travels and meets his father as a boy.
22 (17.1%)

Juniper, by Monica Furlong. A princess studies with her wise-woman aunt.
50 (38.8%)

Mossflower, by Brian Jacques. Martin the Warrior vs en evil cat queen.
24 (18.6%)

Castaways in Lilliput, by Henry Winterfield. Three shipwrecked kids land in Lilliput.
17 (13.2%)

Midsummer, by Katherine Adams. Two New York kids are sent to Sweden & experience Swedish life.
20 (15.5%)

Orphan Island, by Laurel Snyder. Kids live alone on an island.
23 (17.8%)

Mariel of Redwall, by Brian Jacques. Finally a heroine.
25 (19.4%)

The Fairy Caravan, by Beatrix Potter. A miniature animal traveling circus.
19 (14.7%)

A Room Made of Windows, by Eleanor Cameron. Teenage Julia wants to be a writer.
18 (14.0%)

When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit, by Judith Kerr. Anna and her family are refugees in multiple countries.
30 (23.3%)

Hyddenworld, by William Horwood. Two kids find a civilization of tiny people and magic.
23 (17.8%)

Assignment in Alaska (Kathy Martin), by Josephine James. A stewardess has an Alaska adventure.
9 (7.0%)

Talargain, by Joyce Gard. Northumberland selkie fantasy.
45 (34.9%)

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luzula: a Luzula pilosa, or hairy wood-rush (Default)

From: [personal profile] luzula


I read those Brian Jacques books when I was a kid--my most vivid memory is how delicious and vividly described the food at their feasts were.
ursula: bear eating salmon (Default)

From: [personal profile] ursula


When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit has a hilarious sequence in which Anna and her brother try to write essays in French. I think about it often.
rmc28: Rachel in hockey gear on the frozen fen at Upware, near Cambridge (Default)

From: [personal profile] rmc28


I entirely picked my two because I want to hear what New York kids made of Sweden, and because selkie stories.

I read When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit in English for school, around age 12. My memory matches that description and also that I didn't enjoy it much.

likeadeuce: (Default)

From: [personal profile] likeadeuce


I pressed submit before I fully processed 'Northumberland Selkie fantasy' so add a vote for that one.

I also picked 'When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit' because a well meaning adult gave that to me at age 8 or so and I remember nothing about it except that I was frustrated because I expected Pink Rabbit to be a major part of the story and it was not.
sovay: (Rotwang)

From: [personal profile] sovay


Juniper, by Monica Furlong. A princess studies with her wise-woman aunt.

A prequel to Furlong's earlier novel Wise Child: I am sure both would come flooding back to me if I picked them up, but right now what I remember most are the gorgeous covers by Leo and Diane Dillon and a lot of herbalism. I enjoyed both, but there's something in one of them that really upset me in elementary school, and I can't remember which one or what it is.

Mossflower, by Brian Jacques. Martin the Warrior vs en evil cat queen.

Not my favorite of the original Redwall trilogy because Mattimeo is stark staring bonkers and better for it, but I strongly preferred it to Redwall and liked many of the characters; I remember it having less of a collect-the-coupons plot than many books in this series and some genuine deep-time weirdness. Jacques completely retconned the notion of Redwall being anywhere in our world and I was fine with it.

Mariel of Redwall, by Brian Jacques. Finally a heroine.

I adored this one when it came out. There were pirates and the heroine hit things with a hawser with a knot in it, which honestly seems like a viable weapon if you are a mouse and what you are hitting is mostly seagulls. The plot may be stupid. I believe at one point there is a battle with a lobster. I just liked the pirates and the hitting things.

A Room Made of Windows, by Eleanor Cameron. Teenage Julia wants to be a writer.

I read at least three of the Julia Redfern books all around the same time and have trouble distinguishing them by title; unlike the Mushroom Planet books, I never owned any or really re-read them; I have nonetheless positive feelings at seeing this one mentioned.

When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit, by Judith Kerr. Anna and her family are refugees in multiple countries.

Fictionalized from the author's own experiences as a child, actually good, deserves its place on the curriculum (I was not assigned it, I just picked it up off a shelf in third grade and read it through a class), I don't believe I ever read the sequels, a film was made within the last couple of years and I just don't see how that worked. I discovered as an adult that Kerr wrote it as a kind of riposte to The Sound of Music—one of her children came out of the movie declaring, "Now we know what it was like when Mummy was a little girl," which Kerr could not let stand—and while this makes perfect sense to me, I also find it hilarious.

Talargain, by Joyce Gard. Northumberland selkie fantasy.

Never heard of it and curious.
Edited (correcting errors; tired) Date: 2022-01-12 09:03 pm (UTC)
osprey_archer: (Default)

From: [personal profile] osprey_archer


"Finally a heroine" made me cackle with delight.

I read Understood Betsy and Juniper as a child and loved them both for their descriptions of country life. Understood Betsy is more comfort reading; Juniper has magic.

I haven't read Talargain but I (like everyone else, apparently!) am intrigued by Northumberland selkie fantasy.
oracne: turtle (Default)

From: [personal profile] oracne


ZOMG I LOVED THE FAIRY CARAVAN. That's how I learned what peppercorns are.
likeadeuce: (Default)

From: [personal profile] likeadeuce


It shows up on mobile as 'change your vote' but done!

And thanks, I never realized that.
davidgillon: A pair of crutches, hanging from coat hooks, reflected in a mirror (Default)

From: [personal profile] davidgillon


Talargain had me at 'Northumberland' - guess where I was born, the 'selkie fantasy' is just a bonus.

I don't recall hearing any selkie stories about the Northumberland coast, but it's definitely somewhere I can imagine them.
philomytha: airplane flying over romantic castle (Default)

From: [personal profile] philomytha


Mossflower was always my favourite of the Redwall books, and When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit is good - I remember doing a double take when I realised that was the same Judith Kerr of The Tiger Who Came to Tea aka my son’s favourite book aged two. But right now it’s the tiny civilisation that catches my eye out of the list, I love tiny people stories.
princessofgeeks: (Default)

From: [personal profile] princessofgeeks


I've only read Understood Betsy off this list but I loved it as a child.
dorothean: detail of painting of Gandalf, Frodo, and Gimli at the Gates of Moria, trying to figure out how to open them (Default)

From: [personal profile] dorothean


I am pretty sure you will like Juniper, as well as its companion Wise Child which someone already mentioned. They are both very strong on cozy and less cozy details of domestic labor and of an elder woman teaching and mentoring a younger one how to live. I read them both as a teenager and loved them and still do.
qian: Tiny pink head of a Katamari character (Default)

From: [personal profile] qian


I absolutely loved When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit as a child and reread recently; I think it stands up. It's kind of cosy despite being about a child refugee fleeing the Nazis.
em_h: (Default)

From: [personal profile] em_h


Despite being old, I don't think I've read a single one of those. The title of A Room Made of Windows is vaguely familiar, but if I ever read it, I retained nothing at all about it.

I haven't read When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit, but I really liked Judith Kerr's Mog books (for a much younger readership, of course).
snacky: (I <3 books)

From: [personal profile] snacky


I loved both Understood Betsy and When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit, and I like when you read books I loved. A whole new perspective!
sheliak: Billina the hen points ahead with her wing; sun rises in the background. (billina: sunrise)

From: [personal profile] sheliak


I decided to vote based on my childhood reading habits, which meant mostly (but not entirely) voting for the stuff that looked like fantasy.

I don't remember The Fairy Caravan at all, and I thought I'd read all of Beatrix Potter's books!
edenfalling: stylized black-and-white line art of a sunset over water (Default)

From: [personal profile] edenfalling


Redwall books are practically guaranteed to make you hungry whenever there's a banquet scene, and there are always banquet scenes. :)

I would read Mossflower before reading Mariel of Redwall. The books mostly stand alone, but the first two in the series (Redwall and Mossflower) lay down a lot of the worldbuilding that the later books sort of take for granted.
sholio: sun on winter trees (Default)

From: [personal profile] sholio


Understood Betsy is great! I loved it when I was a kid, and reread it relatively recently since it's on Project Gutenberg. I was expecting way more "city bad, country good" and "this is not how disease works" (the premise is basically: sick little girl is sent to live with relatives who have a farm, assigned farm chores, perks up with Actual Work To Do) but actually it's very sweet, far more realistic than I was expecting about the logistics of her home life, and has loads of details about turn-of-the-century farm life and being a kid in (presumably) rural New England that I think you'll really enjoy.
Edited Date: 2022-01-12 10:29 pm (UTC)
pameladean: (Default)

From: [personal profile] pameladean


Just a note: I love A Room Made of Windows, a profoundly formative book for me, but it's the third in a series of four and is full of spoilers for the earlier books. I only recently, within the past two or three years, tracked down and read the other books. The books grow up with Julia; she's about six in the first one. Windows is much more mature.

Cameron does a good job of creating resonance within the confines of the one book, but some things would have rung much louder if I'd read the earlier ones. It's hard to say what the best course is. But it's an amazing book.

P.
pameladean: (Default)

From: [personal profile] pameladean


I got them used, in various states of disarray, mostly via Amazon. That Julia Redfern is an oversized illustrated book, not very long. I feel that Julia and the Hand of God is relevant to some of your interests, but don't want to spoil anything.

P.
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