I feel like that's the age when my nephew starting really getting into Tintin.
Or, that may be my seemingly interminable Spielberg project talking.
But I think he read those before Harry Potter, which he was definitely reading by 6 or 7.
There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."
I feel like that's the age when my nephew starting really getting into Tintin.
Or, that may be my seemingly interminable Spielberg project talking.
But I think he read those before Harry Potter, which he was definitely reading by 6 or 7.
I am really big into classic, especially first half of 20th century, fiction for very young readers with advanced reading levels. Anything written '40s and before has a really high lexile (i.e. complex vocabulary) but generally 6 year old friendly plots. (You do need to do some previewing for racism - Peter Pan is a no, for example.) I suggest Eleanor Estes, The Hobbit, Swallows and Amazons and sequels, Farmer Boy, Mr. Popper's Penguins, The Twenty-One Balloons, and for modern Natalie Babbitt (The Search for Delicious), the Penderwicks series. All of these we've read aloud, starting when Dillo's attention span got long enough at early 5.
Twain: celebrated frog would probably work.
Twain: celebrated frog
Oh, that's a good one!
Eleanor Estes! The Moffats!
And Elizabeth Enright! Gone-Away Lake, Return to Gone-Away, the Melendy stories: The Saturdays, Four Story Mistake, etc.
Enright might be a tad old for a 3rd grade reader, though.
And Elizabeth Enright! Gone-Away Lake, Return to Gone-Away, the Melendy stories: The Saturdays, Four Story Mistake, etc.
Good choices! I read them all.
What about Edward Eager? Half-Magic, Seven-Day Magic, Knight's Castle, and so on.
What about Edward Eager? Half-Magic, Seven-Day Magic, Knight's Castle, and so on.
I love those also!
At a certain point in my childhood I realized I could happily graze in the "E"s and read Estes, Enright and Eager.
I don't know Estes or Enright, but Edward Eager was my jam. Him and E. Nesbit. Also E.W. Hildick. And Allan W. Eckert. So I also liked E's, it seems.
I should track down the Enright stuff and see if it bears up. My middle school library had a big 3-volume omnibus of the Melendy books, and I regularly checked it out. That and teh volumes of the encyclopedia, thick enough to keep me occupied for more than a day or two.