Tuesday, July 28, 2020

A Boy and His Books

When the pandemic started and the kids were kept home from school the remote learning started. I had bought all these wonderful workbooks to keep my son's brain stimulated but not overly. He thought it was great that "summer vacation" started early but was sad that he wouldn't see his teachers or his friends until the next school year (hopefully). He would miss his eighth grade graduation and the finals of the state portion of the National Geography BEE of which he was so proud to be a part of. I believe he had a good chance at placing. He loves geography.

The biggest thing I was worried about was his love of reading. I was afraid that he would lose it with not being assigned a book to read and do a project on. Mr. Morin's class was always fun for him and the projects he assigned were sometimes family oriented where we could all participate. We once went around our town of Pittsfield, Maine to shoot a small film. He edited it and it came out hilarious!

His assignments included the writing of stories. He was given a topic and then had to write a story around it. In most of them he included the character of Garfield the cat. He and his uncle Ray would watch the cartoon together a lot. So much so that Ray calls him 'Garfield' just for fun. The stories were cute and really made him stretch his imagination. Being descriptive when writing was difficult for him but it had come a long way since the beginning of the year.

So what could I do? I remembered that he still had a Kindle that my friend Lynne had given him a few years ago. On it were downloaded books of Diary of a Wimpy Kid, Dog Man and Geronimo Stilton. I thought it was time for him to upgrade his reading level. I went online and found numerous blogs and articles on the books kids should read, specifically boys. They ranged from the classics to newer Newbery Award winners. I had heard of a few on the lists but many I had to do a little research on. I decided to make a compilation of the lists and then add in some of my favorites. When presented with it, Anderson said it was a good one. I took that as high praise from a kid that was going to have to read all summer. We went through it together.

He was able to show me which ones he had already read in school. Six was a good start! I told him we still had the copy of "The Indian in the Cupboard" by Lynne Reid Banks that used to be his Uncle Nate's. He said if Uncle Nate had read it then it had to be good. If that was his philosophy he was going to be pretty happy when he found out which book his stepdad, Chad, had read. I didn't know until I made the list and showed it to Chad that he had read the three books in The Black Stallion series as a kid.

So the reading began. After "The Indian in the Cupboard" came 'The Call of the Wild' by Jack London. We watched the new movie with Harrison Ford after. When it was over he said it was kind of like the book but it was missing "a whole bunch of stuff". Overall he liked it. He looked at the list and saw another Jack London book: 'White Fang'. He asked if it had a dog in it and I told him yes. Off to the Kindle we went and downloaded it right away.

For the weeks we didn't have enough to buy a book on the Kindle, Anderson would ride his bike to the Pittsfield Public Library to check out the book he wanted. He would take his phone with him in case there were any problems. There never were but he took it just in case. My thought is he wanted to catch a few Pokémon along the way. That was fine with me.

He was on a schedule. His bedtime is ten o'clock so at nine at night I would tell him to get his book and he could stay up and read until ten.  He does this every night. Not only is it good for him but reading just before bed makes you sleepy. He gets a great night's sleep every night. Sometimes he reads a chapter, sometimes two. I ask him every morning what went on in the book last night and he tells me. I always ask "Are you enjoying this book?" Sometimes it's a yes...sometimes it's an "It's okay". But not once has he ever said no. By the third or fourth chapter it's always a yes.

If there is a movie made about the book he has read then we watch it directly after. He has come to realize that you can't put an entire book into a two hour movie. But they did succeed in one.

'Old Yeller' by Fred Gipson has, so far, been just like the book. Disney did a great job with it including using dialog word for word in some spots. Both he and Chad had never seen the movie. I had watched it numerous times as child. I thought my crying at the pivotal scene would be nonexistent. Nope. This woman was a blubbering mess much to the delight of Anderson and Chad.

With four months of reading gone by and Anderson only being with me every other week he has completed fourteen books. Not every book on our list is serious in nature. Some are outright fun to read. He is currently on "Where the Red Fern Grows" by Wilson Rawls. Another movie this mom may need tissues for. And that's okay. The more books he reads, the more movies we'll watch together and the more things we have to talk about and discover.

Here is our list of books that you can use to start your child's reading list if you wish.

TITLE

AUTHOR

A Long Way from Chicago

 Richard Peck

A Separate Peace 

 John Knowles

A Wrinkle in Time 

 Madeleine L’Engle

Artemis Fowl

 Eoin Colfer

Blue Skin of the Sea 

 Graham Salisbury

Bridge to Terabithia

 Katherine Paterson

Calvin and Hobbes 

 Bill Watterson

Canoeing with the Cree 

 Arnold Sevareid

Captains Courageous 

 Rudyard Kipling

Charlie and the Chocolate Factory 

 Roald Dahl

David Copperfield 

 Charles Dickens

Diary of a Wimpy Kid

 Jeff Kinney

Ender’s Game 

 Orson Scott Card

Geronimo Stilton

 Elisabetta Dami

Goosebumps

 R.L. Stine

Harris and Me 

 Gary Paulsen

Harry Potter

 JK Rowling

Hatchet 

 Gary Paulsen

Heart of a Champion 

 Carl Deuker

Heat 

 Mike Lupica

Holes 

 Louis Sachar

I Survived

 Lauren Tarshis

James and the Giant Peach 

 Roald Dahl

Lord of the Rings Trilogy 

 J. R. R. Tolkien

Maniac Magee

 Jerry Spinelli

My Side of the Mountain 

 Jean Craighead George

Old Yeller 

 Fred Gipson

Red Badge of Courage 

 Stephen Crane

Rocket Boys

 Homer Hickham, JR

Shiloh

 Phyllis Reynold Naylor

That Was Then, This is Now 

 S.E. Hinton

The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn 

 Mark Twain

The Adventures of Tom Sawyer 

 Mark Twain

The American Boy’s Handy Book 

 Daniel Beard

The Art of Manliness 

 Brett and Kate McKay

The Black Stallion 

 Walter Farley

The Blue Star 

 Tony Earley

The Boy in the Striped Pajamas

 John Boyne

The Boy Scouts Handbook

 

The Call of the Wild 

 Jack London

The Cay 

 Theodore Taylor

The Chocolate War 

 Robert Cormier

The Chronicles of Narnia 

 C.S. Lewis

The Complete Maus 

 Art Spiegelman

The Dangerous Book for Boys 

 Conn and Hal Iggulden

The Giver 

 Lois Lowry

The Graveyard Book 

 Neil Gaiman

The Hardy Boys Series (1-5)

 Franklin Dixon

The Indian in the Cupboard 

 Lynne Reid Banks

The Invention of Hugo Cabret

 Brian Selznik

The Johnny Dixon Series 

 John Bellairs

The Last Mission 

 Harry Mazer

The Little Britches Series 

 Ralph Moody

The Lord of the Flies 

 William Golding

The Miraculous Journey of Edward Tulane

 Kate DiCamillo

The Neverending Story

 Ralph Manhein

The Outsiders 

 S.E. Hinton

The Phantom Tollbooth 

 Norton Juster

The Story of King Arthur and His Knights 

 Howard Pyle

The Thief of Always 

 Clive Barker

The Trumpet of the Swan 

 E.B. White

To Build A Fire

 Jack London

To Kill A Mockingbird 

 Harper Lee

Treasure Island 

 Robert Louis Stevenson

Watership Down 

 Richard Adams

Where the Red Fern Grows 

 Wilson Rawls

White Fang

 Jack London

Wonder 

 R.J. Palacio

Wonderstruck

 Brian Selznik


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