Let's read
Thursday, 25 September 2025
#ThrowbackThursday. July 2025
Wednesday, 24 September 2025
Eccleshare, Julia "1001 Children's Books You Must Read Before You Grow Up"
While reviewing a children's book, I found this list on Wikipedia: 1001 Children's Books You Must Read Before You Grow Up. And discovered, that there is a book with all the descriptions.
I wish this would have existed when my kids were little but I think we still did quite well. I have listed all the books I can remember reading with my boys thoug I have not reviewe all of them. I also sorted them in chronological order rather than by age as on the list. This means, if you are looking for a book for a certain age-group, you better consult the original list. Some of those books are not for 3-year-olds. Or - even better, get the book.
Defoe, Daniel "Gulliver's Travels" - 1726
Lamb, Charles and Mary "Tales from Shakespeare" - 1807
Grimm, Jacob und Wilhelm "Grimm's Fairy Tales" - 1812
(Jorinda and Joringel. Eight Fairy Tales/GE: Jorinde und Joringel. Acht Märchen der Brüder Grimm) - 1812
Hawthorne, Nathaniel "The Scarlet Letter" - 1815
Moore, Clement Clarke "A Visit from St. Nicholas" ('Twas the Night Before Christmas) - 1822
Andersen, Hans Christian "Fairy Tales" - 1837
Dickens, Charles "A Christmas Carol" - 1843
Dumas, Alexandre "The Three Musketeers" (F: Les Trois Mousquetaires) - 1844
Hoffmann, Heinrich "Struwwelpeter" (GE: Der Struwwelpeter) - 1845
Busch, Wilhelm "Max and Moritz" (GE: Max und Moritz) - 1865
Carroll, Lewis "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland" - 1865
Alcott, Louisa May "Little Women Series" - 1868-86
Twain, Mark "The Adventures of Tom Sawyer" - 1876
Spyri, Johanna "Heidi" (GE: Heidis Lehr- und Wanderjahre + Heidi kann brauchen, was es gelernt hat) - 1880/81
Stevenson, Robert Louis "Treasure Island" - 1881/82
Twain, Mark "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn" - 1884
Burnett, Frances Hodgson "Little Lord Fauntleroy" - 1886
Baum, L. Frank "The Wizard of Oz" - 1900
Potter, Beatrix "The Tale of Peter Rabbit" - 1902
Molnár, Ferenc "The Paul Street Boys" (H: A Pál-utcai Fiúk) - 1907
Montgomery, L. M. "Anne of Green Gables" - 1908
Burnett, Frances Hodgson "The Secret Garden" - 1911
Milne, AA "Winnie the Pooh" - 1926
Hergé "Tintin" (F: Tintin) - 1929
Kästner, Erich "Emil and the Detectives" (GE: Emil und die Detektive) - 1929
Ingalls Wilder, Laura "Little House Books" - 1932-71
de Brunhoff, Jean "The Story of Babar" (F: Histoire de Babar le petit éléphant) - 1934
Leaf, Munro "The Story of Ferdinand" - 1936
Streatfeild, Noel "Ballet Shoes" - 1936
Tolkien, J.R.R. "The Hobbit" - 1937
Bemelmans, Ludwig "Madeline" - 1939
Rey, H.A. "Curious George" - 1941-1966
Blyton, Edit "Five on a Treasure Island" - 1942
Forbes, Ester "Johnny Tremain" - 1943
Estes, Eleanor "The Hundred Dresses" - 1944
White, E.B. "Stuart Little" - 1945
Smith, Dodie "I Capture the Castle" - 1948
Lewis, C.S. "The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe" - 1950
Schulz, Charles M. "Peanuts" - 1950
(Advent with the Peanuts"/Advent mit den Peanuts) - 1979/80
Salinger, J.D. "Catcher in the Rye" - 1951
White, E.B. "Charlotte's Web" - 1952
Bradbury, Ray "Fahrenheit 451" - 1953
Saint-Exupéry, Antoine "The Little Prince" (F: Le Petit Prince) - 1953
Golding, William "Lord of the Flies" - 1954
Jansson, Tove "Moominsummer Madness" (FIN: Vaarallinen juhannus/Farlig midsommar) - 1954
Zion, Gene "Harry, the Dirty Dog" - 1956
Awdry, Rev. Wilbert "Thomas the Tank Engine" - 1956-2011
LeSieg, Theo (=Dr. Seuss) "The Cat in the Hat" - 1957
Ryan, John "Captain Pugwash" - 1957
Bond, Michael "A Bear Called Paddington" - 1958
Goscinny, René "Little Nicholas" (F: Le Petit Nicolas) - 1959
Goscinny, René; Uderzo, Albert "Asterix the Gaul" (F: Astérix le Gaulois) - 1959
Eastman, P.D. "Go, Dog, Go!" - 1960
Lee, Harper "To Kill a Mockingbird" - 1960
LeSieg, Theo (=Dr. Seuss) "Green Eggs and Ham" - 1960
Dahl, Roald "James and the Giant Peach" - 1961
Juster, Norton "The Phantom Tollbooth" - 1961
Rawls, Wilson "Where the Red Fern Grows" - 1961
Berenstain, Stan and Jan "The Berenstain Bears" - 1962ff.
L’Engle, Madeleine "A Wrinkle in Time" - 1962
Preußler, Otfried "The Robber Hotzenplotz" (GE: Der Räuber Hotzenplotz) - 1962
Bridwell, Norman "Clifford" - 1963-2015
Bruna, Dick "Miffy" (NL: Nijntje) - 1963
Peyo "The Black Smurfs" (F: Les Schtroumpfs Noir) - 1963
Sendak, Maurice "Where The Wild Things Are" - 1963
Brown, Jeff "Flat Stanley" - 1964
Dahl, Roald "Charlie and the Chocolate Factory" - 1964
Silverstein, Shel "The Giving Tree" - 1964
Biro, Val "Gumdrop" - 1966
Lionni, Leo "Frederick" - 1967
Freeman, Don "Corduroy" - 1968
Kerr, Judith "The Tiger Who Came to Tea" - 1968
Scarry, Richard "What Do People Do All Day" - 1968 et al.
Carle, Eric "The Very Hungry Caterpillar" - 1969
O'Dell, Scott "Island of the Blue Dolphins" - 1969
Tison, Annette; Taylor, Talus "Barbapapa" - 1970
Hargreaves, Roger "Mr. Men" - 1971ff.
Adams, Richard "Watership Down" - 1972
Briggs, Raymond "Father Christmas" - 1973
Silverstein, Shel "Where the Sidewalk Ends - 1974
dePaola, Tomie "Strega Nona" - 1975
Smucker, Barbara "Underground to Canada" - 1977
Ahlberg, Janet & Allen "Each Peach Pear Plum" - 1978
Barrett, Judi "Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs" - 1978
Briggs, Raymond "The Snowman" - 1978
Ende, Michael "The Never Ending Story" (GE: Die unendliche Geschichte) - 1979
Hill, Eric "Where's Spot?" - 1980
Cunliffe, John Arthur "Postman Pat" - 1981
Browne, Anthony "Gorilla" - 1983
Dodd, Lynley "Hairy Maclairy from Donaldsons's Dairy" - 1983
Holabird, Catherine/Craig, Helen "Angelina Ballerina" - 1983
Pausewang, Gudrun "The Cloud" (GE: Die Wolke) - 1987
- "The Last Children" (GE: Die letzten Kinder von Schewenborn oder … sieht so unsere Zukunft aus?) - 1983
Numeroff, Laura "If You Give a Mouse a Cookie" - 1985
Ahlberg, Janet & Allan "The Jolly Postman or Other People's Letters" - 1986
Jacques, Brian "Redwall" - 1986
MacLachlan, Patricia - Sarah, Plain & Tall Series - 1986-2004
Munsch, Robert "Love You Forever" - 1986
Murphy, Jill "Peace at Last" (Five Minutes Peace) - 1986
Paulsen, Gary "Hatchet" - 1986
Ihimaera, Witi "The Whale Rider" - 1987
King-Smith, Dick "The Hodgeheg" - 1987
Waddell, Martin "Can't You Sleep, Little Bear" - 1988
McKee, David "Elmer" - 1989
Rosen, Michael "We're Going on a Bear Hunt" - 1989
Scieszka, Jon; Smith, Lane "The True Story of the Three Little Pigs" - 1989
LeSieg, Theo (=Dr. Seuss) "Oh, the Places You'll Go" - 1990
Inkpen, Mick "Kipper" - 1991
Scieszka, Jon; Smith, Lane "The Stinky Cheeseman" - 1992
Buchholz, Quint "Sleep Well, Little Bear" (GE: Schlaf gut, kleiner Bär) - 1993
Cannon, Janell "Stellaluna" - 1993
McBratney, Sam "Guess How Much I Love You" - 1994
Pullman, Philip "Northern Lights" - 1995
Hesse, Karen "Out of the Dust" - 1997
Rowling, J.K. "Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone" - 1997
Sachar, Louis "Holes" - 1998
Curtis, Christopher Paul "Bud, Not Buddy" - 1999
Donaldson, Julia "The Gruffalo" - 1999
Colver, Eoin "Artemis Fowl" - 2001
Allende, Isabel "City of the Beasts" (E: La ciudad de las bestias) - 2002
Hartnett, Sonya "Thursday’s Child" - 2002
Zusak, Markus "The Messenger" - 2002
Funke, Cornelia "Inkheart" (GE: Tintenherz) - 2003
Haddon, Mark "The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time" - 2003
Cottrell Boyce, Frank "Millions" - 2004
Boyne, John "The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas" - 2006
From the back cover:
"This is the best and most authoritative guide to classic and contemporary children’s literature today. It is the latest in the best-selling 1001 series, and its informative reviews are the key to differentiating the "must-read" books from all the rest in the realm of children’s books. Whether you are a parent seeking to instill a love of reading in your child, an educator or counselor looking for inspiration, or a young reader with a voracious appetite, this guide to the best writing for children and young adults covers the spectrum of children’s literature. It is organized by age group—from board books to YA novels and all the gradiations in between. Each entry features evaluations by a team of international critics complete with beautifully reproduced artwork from the featured title. The beloved classics are here, but the guide also takes a global perspective and includes the increasingly diverse contributions from African American and Latino authors and illustrators—not to mention important books from around the world."
Monday, 22 September 2025
Benedetti, Mario "The Truce"
Diana from Thoughts on Papyrus recommended this book to me. It's not very long, so I read it in between other things. Despite its brevity, it contains a lot, practically everything you need for a long life.
It's about a man nearing retirement. Well, much earlier than most people retire, but the situation is still realistic. He's wondering what he's going to do with the rest of his life. Then he falls in love with a co-worker, and she falls in love with him. After raising his three children alone after the untimely death of his wife, this is a new beginning for him.
In his diary, we can follow his thoughts. It also deals with religion; among other things, he says: "Frankly, I don't know if I believe in God. Sometimes I think that if God really existed, such doubts shouldn't upset him." I think this quote alone says a lot about the book, which I really enjoyed. It's a calm narrative that nevertheless has a lot to say.
From the back cover:
"'Perhaps that moment had been exceptional, but still, I felt alive. That pressure on my chest means being alive.' Forty-nine, with a kind face, no serious ailments (apart from varicose veins on his ankles), a good salary, and three moody children, widowed accountant Martín Santomé is about to retire. He assumes he'll take up gardening, or the guitar, or whatever retired people generally do. What he least expects is to fall passionately in love with his shy young employee Laura Avellaneda. As they embark upon an affair, happy and irresponsible, Martín begins to feel the weight of his quiet existence lift - until, out of nowhere, their joy is cut short. The intimate, heartbreaking diary of an ordinary man who is reborn when he falls in love one final time, this beloved Latin American novel has been translated into twenty languages and sold millions of copies worldwide."
Friday, 19 September 2025
Book Quotes
Like books!!! You can never have enough books.
Find more book quotes here.
Thursday, 18 September 2025
#ThrowbackThursday. June 2015
Brown, Eleanor "The Weird Sisters" - 2011
Wednesday, 17 September 2025
Ephron, Nora "Crazy Salad"
I absolutely love Nora Ephron. Shes was a fantastic author as well as a fantastic human being. Everything she says is close to my heart and I felt nodding along, no matter what I was reading about. If you ever felt like the odd one out, as if nothing you did would be acknowledged by others and they would always find a new excuse why, this is the book for you.
Of course, this book was written in the Seventies, at a time where we had no internet and not as much information about what was going on across the pond as it is now. I remember a game I played with some American friends about thirty years ago where we had to guess celebrities and I had never heard of Ruth Bader Ginsberg. She just wasn't in our news until then. Neither were many of the women in Nora Ephron's book, some of them I read about in the meantime (Gloria Steinem, for example) but others I had never heard about. So, I had a lot of extra reading to do but that was alright because it gave me a larger insight into the US of A of the time.
So, whether you are American or not, if you are a fan of "When Harry Met Sally", you would want to read this.
Book Description:
"The classic Crazy Salad by screenwriting legend and novelist Nora Ephron, is an extremely funny, deceptively light look at a generation of women (and men) who helped shape the way we live now. In this distinctive, engaging, and simply hilarious view of a period of great upheaval in America, Ephron turns her keen eye and wonderful sense of humor to the media, politics, beauty products, and women's bodies. In the famous A Few Words About Breasts, for example, she tells us: 'If I had had them, I would have been a completely different person. I honestly believe that.' Ephron brings her sharp pen to bear on the notable women of the time, and to a series of events ranging from Watergate to the Pillsbury Bake-Off. When it first appeared in 1975, Crazy Salad helped to illuminate a new American era - and helped us to laugh at our times and ourselves. This new edition will delight a fresh generation of readers."
Monday, 15 September 2025
Dostoevsky, Fyodor "A Little Hero"
Novel in Nine Letters - 1847
A Gentle Creature - 1876
A Little Hero - 1849
This booklet consists of three short stories, but I liked the "Novel in Nine Letters" the best. It's the correspondence between two men who somehow always manage to miss each other.
Dostoevsky said of this: "When I was penniless the other day, I visited Nekrasov. While I was sitting with him, the idea came to me to write a novel in nine letters. When I returned home, I finished the novel in one night. In the morning, I brought the manuscript to Nekrasov and received 125 rubles for it."
In this story, you can tell that Pyotr Ivanych wants something from Ivan Petrovich and vice versa. One excuse for why the meeting doesn't take place follows another. Very funny.
I had already read "The Gentle One" in another collection. (see here) Also an interesting story about the beginning and end of a relationship and how it all came about.
I found the actual story, or rather the one that adorns the title, rather boring. An eleven-year-old falls in love with his cousin, and the "gentlewomen" of society make this the subject of their amusement, making fun of him, and embarrassing him. Nevertheless, it's a Dostoyevsky story and therefore worth reading in its own right.
From the back cover:
"At that time I was nearly eleven, I had been sent in July to spend the holiday in a village near Moscow with a relation of mine called T., whose house was full of guests, fifty, or perhaps more.... I don't remember, I didn't count. The house was full of noise and gaiety. It seemed as though it were a continual holiday, which would never end. It seemed as though our host had taken a vow to squander all his vast fortune as rapidly as possible, and he did indeed succeed, not long ago, in justifying this surmise, that is, in making a clean sweep of it all to the last stick."