Skipping to ask what age range is A Wrinkle In Time good for? Is 7 too young?
Probably a little too young, but it depends on the kid.
'Same Time, Same Place'
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
Skipping to ask what age range is A Wrinkle In Time good for? Is 7 too young?
Probably a little too young, but it depends on the kid.
I just made Casper very upset by telling her I would not be buying expensive Christmas presents (from the American Girl doll catalog) for our neighbors. Where did she get the idea we might? We've never given presents beyond, like, a plate of cookies to people outside of our family. I also hastily emailed my neighbor to make sure we were on the same page about this.
It's making me terrified that Casper will pitch fits if she doesn't get one of her top choices from the AG catalog for Christmas. The top choices are mostly over $80 (she's obsessed with the furniture and miniature fake food). We talked just today about getting her Minecraft and a guitar. I am so SICK of American Girl and its prices. I am so sick of toys in my house.
I read A Wrinkle in Time in 3rd grade, which would have put me at 8, I think. I think I was definitely ahead of the curve in reading it at that age, because my teacher assigned it to me for a book report in 6th grade. But I agree with Hil, 7 is probably a bit young, unless of course we're talking about a super smart kid.
Seven is too young to read A Wrinkle in Time by oneself (for the average 7), but it could probably be read aloud at that age for many.
aurelia,
I read A Wrinkle in Time around 3rd grade as well. I think if the child is a good reader, that is okay. The sequels are NOT OKAY for young readers though. Mostly because of difficulty of language, not content.
I'm shopping for girls ages 4 and 7 and boys ages 13 and 15. I swear this used to be easier.
Do the boys like to read? I love The Westin Game (which might work for the 13 year old)
They're all readers and they're all smart kids. I'm more concerned with content than reading difficulty.
It's making me terrified that Casper will pitch fits if she doesn't get one of her top choices from the AG catalog for Christmas.
One year, I wasn't allowed to ask for anything I only wanted because of commercials. Can you make some kind of rule like that? Although I guess it doesn't help if her friends have the AG stuff. I am still sad I was too old for that stuff, but there's no actual way I would have ever gotten any anyway! For reference, I had a "Cabbage Patch" doll my grandmother made me, not a brand one.
Poor Homer just had a seizure, and he's a little weirded out. Me too, man! Scary. (He's definitely had more I haven't seen, but this is just the second I've seen.)
Reading it alone, I found A Wrinkle in Time pretty scary in 4th grade.