Classics for the under-five set

We have read:

Little house in the big Woods
The Boxcar Children
Charlotte's Web
Winnie the Pooh

Currently we are reading Little House on the Prairie.

I'm not really into picture books and I need some suggestions of some more good books to read to the boys. The oldest (five) has resisted Betsy-Tacy because its a girl book, but welcomes Little House books.

The three-year-old has been a little delayed and is just starting to talk, so he doesn't really care for any of the above.

Please let me know what you are reading...

picture books

For under-fives we really love:

Ollie, Peedie, etc. by Olivier Dunrea

I Was So Mad, All By Myself, and Just Go To Bed by Mercer Meyer (some of this other are not so good, but we LOVE reading these, they're just perfect)

Our Favorite Fairy Tales for this age are:
Goldilocks and the Three Bears/ Ricitos de oro y los tres osos by Marta Mata, Arnal Ballester, and Alis Alejandro
Little Red Riding Hood/Caperucita Roja (Bilingual Fairy Tales) [Paperback]
Jacob Grimm (Author)
The Ugly Duckling/El Patito Feo (Bilingual Fairy Tales) [Paperback]
Merce Escardo i Bas (Adapter), Merce Escardo i Bas (Author)

The Real Mother Goose

A Pocketful of Cricket Rebecca Caudill (Author)

The Snowy Day by Ezra Jack Keats

Corduroy

Harold and the Purple Crayon 50th Anniversary... by Crockett Johnson

Tikki Tikki Tembo by Arlene Mosel

Where the Wild Things Are by Maurice Sendak

The Fish is Me, Bathtime Rhymes

We read lots of poetry and lots of picture books carefully chosen from the library. Here are some of our favorite authors:

Eric Carle
Cynthia Rylant
Tomie de Paola
Margaret Wise Brown

I actually like these for 5-6 years old more:

Winnie the Pooh
Stewart Little
Beatrix Potter
Grimm Fairy Tales
Swiss Family Robinson

Keep going, I'm generating

Keep going, I'm generating one heck of a book-list here!

Thanks to all of you for contributing. Many of these are definitely on my classics list as well. One I haven't seen mentioned is,
"What do you do with a tail like this?" Our kids are 6,4,& 3 and this has been a household favorite for 18 months or more. The illustrations are collages of handmade paper exquisitely assembled to look like animals. The color and the texture are fantastic, and the kids love guessing which animal is on the next page while they are looking at the close-up of the tails/mouths/ears.

I've been reading chapter books with my 6yod, but would love suggestions for something that would interest the 4, and 3 year old. I suspect, they are just too little to sit still, so we may have to stick with our, 1 children's book a piece before bed.

~April.

It will surprise

It will surprise you how much--and which things--the little children pick up on while the older children are listening to something. I've read a number of things aloud and my younger children find fascinating aspects to put into their own play. I advise caution, however, since my younger children also get frightened by some things that don't bother the older children. Take time with younger children to listen to their play and talk with them about what they're thinking. My 5yodd tends to severe anxiety and sometimes has to be kept away from what I'm reading; she understands just enough to be dangerous.

Another classic for under 5

I can't believe I forgot this one...

My kids loved 'Chicka Chicka Boom Boom'. They loved it so much we now also have the Ray Charles read version on our IPODS and my kids are almost 8 and 11 so go figure. There is also a numbers version that we have but I can't recall the title, it's Chicka Chicka something, that much I know.

Here are a few of the chapter

Here are a few of the chapter books my little ones have loved to listen to while I've read to my older ones:

Dr Dolittle (whole series)
My Father's Dragon (and the sequels)
Capyboppy
Five Children and It

Happy Reading!

Some of our faves were...

...heck and still are 'The Gas We Pass' and 'Everyone Poops'. The kids loved them as younger readers and dd at 7 still loves them. Yes, the subject matter can be gross but very natural and normal. The element of laughter while reading is amazing. These two books are MUST haves in my opinion.

I sell with Usborne Books and we carry them both. We also carry one called 'The Holes in Your Nose' which we haven't gotten yet but want to add next since the other two were such HUGE hits.

Ordered from the library

We ordered these from the library today. Thanks for the suggestion. I'm dealing with a 5yodd who will not, Will Not, use the toilet for any reason. Maybe some discussion will help... She is slightly autistic (which really means, brilliant--too brilliant to be bothered by mundane things like bodily needs :D ).

HFWM- How are those books

HFWM-

How are those books going over with your kids? I am curious in your feedback.

books

We got them a couple days ago. My 2yo was fascinated; my 5yo who refuses to use the toilet tried to feign indifference. But she listened to it and looked at the pictures, and then wanted to hear it again. She did not find it funny. The 2yo didn't laugh either; he made comments about size and shape of poop, and the 8yo commented on smells. Very scientific, no laughter at all. But they liked reading it and discussing it. So hopefully this will lead to using the toilet...

HFWM- I am glad they are both

HFWM-

I am glad they are both however deriving something from them. If looking at it from a scientific standpoint is their passion then that is wonderful. I think my kids are just more prone to being funny goofballs. It did open up conversation which is a good thing.

Oh, I have

Oh, I have funny goofballs, too. Just not my 5yo. Apparently she doesn't have enough understanding of human nature (or something) to crack funny jokes or to laugh at things on her own. She will laugh and laugh if she gets tickled, or if she makes a joke--but her jokes are about as funny as the dog's joke in Up: "it is funny because the squirrel gets dead".

The tipping point

At last we have crossed the tipping point; my 5yodd loved (well, listened to repeatedly and eagerly discussed, asked questions about, and made comments about) the two books you recommended. She now claims ownership of her own pee and poop (for a long time she tried to blame her wet diaper on me or on some nameless force or on her body--not her responsibility because it didn't belong to her). She still wears training pants, but does pee in the toilet willingly when we're about to go somewhere (she recognizes the validity of "needing to pee before going to the library"; her 8yo sister frequently has to Run to the toilet because of waiting until the very last second). She has pooped in the toilet twice in the last week, a major accomplishment.

I know, you don't really want a blow-by-blow of how she's doing. But it is a tremendous relief to me to have my daughter finally take this bull by the horns; she'll be Six Years Old in October and has known for at least a year exactly what to do, how to wipe and how to wash her hands and everything!

Thank you. I believe these books have got through to her, without being judgmental, that everyone has this issue.

Oh, and she can belch really well.

WOOHOOOOOO!!!!!!

HFWM-

I am thrilled to hear this. What a relief for you mom. I don't mind the details, as a mom I have been there. Those books are fun and I am glad they helped your 5yo.

Yes, we all have that issue, we all pee and poop, or as my grandparents used to say 'pees and carrots'. And BRAVO to her for being a prize winning belcher.

Another BIG WOOOOOOHOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!!

Now you can recommend with confidence those two books to anyone else needing help.

Oh yes!

Yes. Still working on consistency. But we're going! Thanks!

You're Welcome

HFWM-

I am glad I could be of assistance. My kids still at 7 and 10 love both books, especially the 7 year old. If you decide you would like to add them to your own library let me know and I will offer them to you at a discount. Ours are VERY well LOVED!!!

Bought it on Amazon!

I loved all of the books everyone suggested. My 2 1/2 daughter loves reading and I've always gotten her books- but I never really thought about getting 'classics' for her. I just bought the book 'Books that build Character' and have enjoyed the reading list. I also bought some of the other suggestions and she loves them! I can't get her to sit through the Velveteen Rabbit quite yet, but I'm glad to have started a collection of good books.

I am finding I have been able

I am finding I have been able to find excellent children's books by using a book lists or book anthologies. So far I've used "Books that Build Character" by William Kilpatrick and Gregory and Suzanne Wolfe. I've have gotten books from the library that the book suggests. I was delighted!
I got books from their picture book list and these books were far superior to the silly books that we often ended up with when we got books by chance at the library. There is a place for the silly books too, but I really wanted something more. Some of my kids favorite books were the ones we got from this book anthology. I mean, they really qualify as "classics" for the under 5 set!
The anthology has lists for various genre's divided by age for each genre along with a description of what each book is about. The list picture books for the middle age, they list great read a-loud chapter books and then later more intense books for older ages. What was also fun with the picture books, was when there is a classic like Sleeping Beauty, the author suggests the best version with the best illustrations.
Another anthology that I am looking to check out is Honey for a Child's Heart.

A few of our favorites are:

Dogger
The Little House
When I Was Young in the Mountains
Yonder
The Book of Virtues
Wilfred Gordon McDonald Partridge
Owl Moon

I sell Usborne Books and we

I sell Usborne Books and we carry Wilfred Gordon McDOnald Patridge and I was thinking about ordering it for us. Thanks for listing it as one of your favorites, made my decision much easier.

Good idea

I like that idea. I have heard of _Honey for a Child's Heart_ but haven't read it. I bought a couple books on movies that fit into time periods and that build character, back when we started homeschooling, but haven't used them much. I'll have to look for _Books that Build Character_. We've been really disappointed with what comes up by chance at the library.

I can't imagine anyone not

I can't imagine anyone not loving picture books. BUT, I know if you just randomly select them at your library, you are likely to grab a lot that aren't that great. Good picture books, like any classics, can be enjoyed over and over by both parents and children. I have recently begun to read chapter books with my children, but I hope that picture books always have a place here, as well.

Some favorites (that I didn't see listed below) include:
Scaredy Squirrel (and its sequels)
A Visitor for Bear
Room on the Broom
An Egg is Quiet and A Seed is Sleepy
The Little Mouse, The Red Ripe Strawberry, and the Big Hungry Bear
Is your Mama a Llama?
Muncha! Muncha! Muncha!
Fox Makes Friends
Miss Rumphius
There's No Such Thing as a Dragon
Strega Nona
Hooway for Wodney Wat
Emily's Balloon
The Sneetches

Some favorite picture book authors:
Mo Willems
Karma Wilson
David Shannon
Doreen Cronin
Leah Wilcox
Jane Yolen

If you're looking for more novels to read, we loved The Tale of Despereaux, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, The Indian in the Cupboard, and The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe.

Feel free to check out my blog for book recommendations for all ages. http://homespunlight.blogspot.com/

Fun, Fun

Some of my favorites: The Seven Silly Eaters, Five Chinese Brothers, Eco Babies/Urban Babies (the whole set is hilarious), Fortune-teller (Lloyd Alexander), Falling for Rapunzel, How do Dinosaurs Eat Their Food (and the other ones), Tuesday, Fancy Nancy, Where the Wild Things Are (of course), and too many others to count. Thanks for your fun lists!

Hmm

I would say that picture books (regardless of your feelings about them) are entirely the way to go. They are age appropriate, teach important concepts, keep young readers interest, and instill a love of reading.

Re: Classics for the under-five set

Books my mom read to me when I was young that were fun were
Riki Tiki Tavi,
The jungle book,
Prydane chronicles (most famous is the third book in the series called "the black cauldron"),
chronicles of narnia,
and to the younger kids Harry Potter series.
Also loved the paper bag princess picture book,
and the Talking with Dragons series

Re: Classics for the under-five set

We have repeatedly read (and recited) poems from the first two volumes of our Childcraft set. It's from the 1950s I think; the later sets up to the present day are much less well illustrated. The older the better, in this case. The illustrations in our set are by some of the best known illustrators of the time: Walt Disney, Eloise Wilkin, and many others. The poems are classics, greats such as The Highwayman, and Hiawatha, as well as funny ones like Miss T, and Eletelephony.

Re: Classics for the under-five set

Sandra Boynton!!!

My 2yo likes us to read "Pajama Time!" about 20 times a day. That one and "Barnyard Dance" are my favorites.

Also, I feel that Nursery Rhymes and Fairy Tales are very important for little ones to be familiar with. There are good lessons learned, as well as them just being a big part of cultural literacy! There are some really gorgeous Fairy Tale and Nursery rhyme books, alike. I just love to share these beautifully illustrated classics with my children!

Thanks for all the other great suggestions, ladies! I have more to add to my list now! :-)

Re: Classics for the under-five set

I want to add the Spot books. I found _Where's Spot?_, the signed English edition, and I'm practicing my sign language while reading it to my 3yo. She adores it. Somehow learning sign language at the same time helps her speak more clearly. Of course, the signs she's learning are the basic nouns, not the particles of speech yet, and she doesn't use particles of speech much to make sentences yet, either... that's why I'm working with my sign language, in hopes it will improve her speech.

Re: Classics for the under-five set

One small suggestion, my boys (6 and 3) like the Billy and Blaze books. They are long picture books and definately adventures. Being city folk, the boy and his horse concept really seems exciting to us :). Also, Snip, Snap, Snur books have great illustrations. They are longer picture books but usually teach some great old values. Lois Lenski books are fabulous picture books too.

Some others not mentioned that my boys like:
My Father's Dragon
Balto
The Family Under the Bridge
Dr. Doolittle
A Child's History of the World (not so much for the 3yo)
A Grain of Rice
Red Sails to Capri

Now I have said more than I meant to. I guess we just love books.

Re: Classics for the under-five set

I wanted to hear what it is about picture books that keeps you away from them before I made this post so I could address that directly. My desire would be for you to have the types of experiences with picture books we have had in our home. We have been reading picture books since the children were born. They are powerful for children and adults. I couldn't make it through Core Phase without them. Here is some of what I have found.

(Miss Tilly) was smiling at something she held in her two cupped hands. It was small and white and furry.
(To her cat) “What do you think of this, Oliver? she said. “Its name is Marshmallow.” She held the furry thing to her cheek for a moment, as though it were very nice indeed. Then she set it on the floor.
It had tall ears, pink eyes, a wiggly nose, and twitchy whiskers. And to Oliver’s dismay it was alive!
Oliver was appalled. He took one wild look at the creature, then squinched his eyes tight shut, as if he could not bear the sight of it.
“Oliver, what is the matter with you?” cried Miss Tilly. “Don’t tell me you’re afraid of a little tiny baby bunny!”
So goes the dialog that drew me into this picture book the first time I read Marshmallow by Clare Turlay Newberry. Her descriptive style makes it easy to imagine and feel the story. Her soft charcoal drawings are delightful and so appropriate for this gentle account of natural enemies who become friends. Marshmallow is on my Core Phase classics list because among other things, I think it is a wonderful example of great writing.

The Bear that Heard Crying by Natalie Kinsey-Warnock and Helen Kinsey is also on my CPh classics list. I found in it great lessons about obedience, unity and willingness to follow promptings. Helen Kinsey found this story while doing her genealogy. Many picture books tell true stories and allow us to learn form the real life experiences of others in an engaging way. My five year old son wanted to share this one with his friends. It’s a gem!

The Gardener by Sarah Stewart is another not-to-be-missed. I picked it up at our local library simply because I noticed the Caldecott sticker on it and thought it might be worth a try. We were richly rewarded. It is a series of letters written by a young girl as she goes through the experiences of leaving her home and family, working in a bakery, making new friends and touching lives in her very own and personal way. My five year old daughter and I cried together after reading this one. The last picture in the book (maybe it is the second-to-last picture) is worth a thousand words!

I also have a few books on my CPh classics list that have helped us communicate ideas and feelings more effectively in our family. An example of this would be The Mitten by Alvin Tresselt. It is basically the story of “the straw that broke the camel’s back” only it’s the “cricket that split the mitten”. Here is what happened to us. A few weeks ago I lost my temper with my children, one ds in particular. After I calmed down and apologized for losing my cool my son queried, “Mom why did that upset you so much. It was just a little thing.” How could I explain to my children what I was feeling? I thought of The Mitten. It wasn’t really the little cricket that split the mitten. It was the mouse, and the fox, and the frog, and the bear, and the owl, and the boar. You get the picture. It was many things together that split the mitten just as it was many prior things together pressuring me until I split. It helped them see things a little differently and hopefully, understand their mother a little better. Tell me you don’t ever have days like that! Other books that have helped us communicate are Cows in the House, Mr.Gumpy’s Outing, Tops and Bottoms, Oh, the Places You’ll Go, and other Dr. Seuss books.

One last example; after reading The Ox-cart Man my 6 year old daughter, feeling extremely inspired said, “Mom we don’t do that! We better get busy!” I wish I could have bottled her tone and expression. I could never have put that into her as the book did. She was lit head to toe. We had a fun discussion on what we could do to be producers not mere consumers. It was priceless. And I wonderd if it didn’t speak of mission for her? We’ll have to wait and see.

Oh, I could go on and on. But I won’t. Again I say, we have had awesome, profound, experiences reading picture books. We’ve covered a lot of core ground together over the years. To me they are extremely valuable. You may not like the same ones I like. Look through a couple of reference books. Honey for a Child’s Heart is a good place to start. I’m sure you will find wonderful things to share with your children.
Picture this; my almost 11 year old son trying to squish in on the couch somewhere says, “Can I sit too? I want to see the pictures.”

OTHER PICTURE BOOKS WE HAVE LOVED (some more than others of course)
The Moas
Somebody Loves you Mr. Hatch
Amos and Boris
A Tale of Two Houses
The Monster an the End of this Book
Alexander and the Wind-up Mouse
Monkey and the Crocodile
The King’s Chessboard
The Rag Coat
Owl Moon
Grandfather’s Gold Watch
Bonny’s Big Day ( and other James Herriot books)
The Spider and the Fly
The Giving Tree
The Clown of God
Rocks in his Head
The Selfish Giant
Sylvester and the Magic Pebble
The Velveteen Rabbit
All the Places to Love
The Big Big Sea
Bear Snores On
The Lorax (almost anything by Dr. Suess)
Katy and the Big Snow
Mike Mulligan and his Steam Shovel
Little Toot
The Little Engine that Could
Make Way for Ducklings
Blueberries for Sal
The Little Red Hen
…and we are always looking for more!

Great book list!

Hey! It was so much fun to read your book list because we share so many of the same favorites!!Yea! It made me happy. And I love what you said about picture books. I love picture books and ALL good books. Bravo. I especially love "The Gardner". It inspired me to plant a million seeds this spring. This font just got HUGE. Sorry, but I don't know how to undo it.

Re: Classics for the under-five set

Thanks for these recommendations. I have wanted to read to my 3yo, now that the baby is 7 months old and less time-consuming. But I realized I had packed up or moved almost all of the picture books out of her reach, in an effort to cut down on clutter (without realizing that they were on the floor the most because they were used the most). I need to replace some because of wear. We ruin about a bushel of picture books per child (yard sale books to begin with and then lots of use). I would rather the children use them than keep them pristine. But I do need to teach better book care habits and make them easier to put away.

Re: Classics for the under-five set

My barely 5 yr old LOVES the Chronicles of Narnia series. We've recently read Winnie the Pooh and Charlotte's Web, as well. We're reading Little Britches right now. We're going to read the Great Brain books next, as a compare and contrast between Ralph and Tom. We also like the Blaze books (Blaze finds the trailhead, ect). We also love all things Dr. Suess.
Where the Wild Things Are
Do Princesses Wear Hiking Boots?
Tales from Beatrix Potter
A Fly Went By
Blueberries for Sal
Max Lucado books
The Trumpet of the Swan
All Little House books
DK-type books on bugs, planets, birds, mammals, ect.
I'm looking at: The Apple and the Arrow, The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, Five Little Peppers and How They Grew, ect.

Anxious to see everyone's favorites!

Re: Classics for the under-five set

I read and reread _Five Little Peppers and How They Grew_ as a child. I haven't acquired a copy for my children, though. It just hasn't been important enough to pay shipping on. It's probably worth getting, but there are so many other good books, too, and only so much money, limited shelf space, limited time to read aloud. The ones who are the right age to enjoy it most, are not reading independently enough yet. My dd is improving, but not reading for fun.

Re: Classics for the under-five set

Most of Dr. Seuss's books, things by P.D. Eastman, _Go, Dog, Go!_, _Put Me In the Zoo_.

I'm wondering also why you are "not really into picture books". I have to point out that your children may be VERY into picture books, if given opportunity and encouragement. Picture books give you the opportunity to discuss what's going on in the pictures, more than what's in the words of the book. There are classic picture books. One of them is _Arrow to the Sun_, a Caldecott Award book. Small children do need to see some things in order to attach the right words to the right pictures; they need to increase their vocabulary by seeing what's being talked about.

The three year old may talk a lot more (my 3yodd does) if he can attach words to pictures.

Re: Classics for the under-five set

My son, who is four, loves to be read to. He listens to all the chapter books we are reading aloud, but he adores it when his older sisters or I read picture books to him - especially ones that he can pretend he is reading, too. Here are some of his current favorites:

"I will never, not ever eat a tomato" by Lauren Child
"Danny and the Dinosaur"
"Frog and Toad" books
"Amelia Bedelia"
Eric Carle books
Magic Tree House books
children's nonfiction books - things about tools, trucks, animals, insects, body parts, etc. He likes to learn about how things work and they can have some great pictures.

I thought Jim Trelease's book "The Read Aloud Handbook" had some good resources. You might check it out from the library.

Re: Classics for the under-five set

What is it about picture books that has you turned off?

Among many others that have

Among many others that have already been mentioned, we really love the Burgess book of birds and the Burgess book of Animals. They talk of Peter Rabbits' adventures getting to know all the animals and birds in the forest. They learn all about the animals and what makes them special. My 4 and 6 year old love these.

our faves so far

My 2.5yo daughter loves the board book "Babies"
Also loves the Very Hungry Caterpillar.
We are also enjoying Robert Louis Stevenson's poems illustrated by the same great as "Babies," Fujikawa.

Great pictures are worth looking at :) My rule of thumb is if I enjoy looking at it over and over again, then probably it is good for my daughter too :)

I remember loving
Frog and Toad series
Uncle Remus series
Stone Soup
Dr. Seuss, particularly Fox in Sox, ABC, Bartholomew's 500 Hats (because it was long and I got more mommy time)...
And you reminded me also, the old Childcraft series when I visited my grandparents

And...any story my mom told me :)

We like those, too.

Most of the ones you mention, we enjoy too. Hadn't heard of the illustrator, Fujikawa. We'll have to look for him.

I really like the drawings in the original Little Bear books by Elsa Holmelund Minarik, pictures by Maurice Sendak. For once the Nickelodeon TV series, Little Bear, is also really good, based on these books.

We like _The Story About Ping_. It teaches a little about Chinese culture.
_Sam and the Firefly_ is a good cautionary tale.
_Are You My Mother?_
Over seven children we have worn out several copies of _Green Eggs and Ham_ and _Go Dog Go_.

My 8yodd loves _Uncle Arthur's Bedtime Stories_, five volumes; I read them all as a child and learned a lot about God and about polite behavior. But as an adult I have difficulty reading them now. They're heavily God-centered, Christian in outlook, which isn't bad for me, but they're preachy. Every story has a strong moral; every story teaches something. They're very deliberate about what they're intended to teach. I feel as if they were meant for Sunday School and not for fun. There are times when I wish I had read them aloud to some of my children, because they do teach unselfish behavior.

Oh, and

Oh, and _The Kitten Who Thought He Was A Mouse_. Awesome illustrations.
_The Bunny Book_ by Richard Scarry (and Patricia Scarry, I think)
_Richard Scarry's Please and Thank You Book_