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Help Shopping for a Book

Suldulin

First Post
We're looking for a book that is at about a 2nd grade reading level or just slightly above. The kid really likes dragons and his mother has already read the Harry Potter books to him, from what I understand. One thought is to get him the PageMaster. Any suggestions/aid though would be appreciated.
 
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'Spiderwick'

What about those SPIDERWICK books? Here's a article I saw on them recently.


<b>'Spiderwick' wraps the scary in a 'cozy' package </b>

By Jacqueline Blais, USA TODAY

In the world of kid-lit, a certain kind of scary book is in demand: Gothic Lite.
The Spiderwick Chronicles by Tony DiTerlizzi and Holly Black — "more cozy than chilling" — fills the bill, says Roger Sutton, editor in chief of The Horn Book Magazine, which covers children's books.

In the imagined Spiderwick world, twins Jared and Simon, 9, and sister Mallory, 13, move into a falling-down Victorian house with their divorced mom, a nice librarian who does not notice that the house and yard are teeming with faeries, ogres, brownies, griffins, trolls and goblins. The Grace kids, of course, do.

These chapter books are aimed at the pre-Harry Potter set, ages 7and up.

Writer Black describes the stories as "unnerving and frightening, not little horror stories ... more adventure than anything else."

Adds illustrator DiTerlizzi, who helped develop the story line: "But they have to have danger, just like any fairy tale. Kids don't want it candy-coated. They want a little grit."

The five Spiderwick books are a little more than 100 pages each, invitingly illustrated and small enough to hold easily. But, as DiTerlizzi told one fan: "Dude, when you're done, you've read a 500- to 600-page book."

That fan would be Alexander Carr, 10, of Alexandria, Va., who once was what is called euphemistically a reluctant reader. Reading was "evil," he says, his hand chopping downward. He started the first in the series, The Field Guide, one night, woke up in the morning, found the book at his side and started reading more.

"These books are so fun, they're easy, they're what I like," he says. The books are "adventurous, not scary."

Alexander concedes that the books might be a "little scary, but I know (the Grace kids) are going to be OK, because then they wouldn't have published the books."

The first two, The Field Guide and The Seeing Stone, were published in May 2003. Lucinda's Secret came out in October 2003, and The Ironwood Tree was published in April. The fifth and concluding The Wrath of Mulgarath arrived in September.

Mulgarath did best on the USA TODAY Best-Selling Books list, making the top 50 for three weeks this fall. The books are now in 30 languages, and about 2.5 million are in print, says Tracy van Straaten of Simon & Schuster Children's Publishing.

Black, 32, and DiTerlizzi, 35, say that in the real world, their styles mesh well.

They knew from the start that they were kindred spirits. Black interviewed DiTerlizzi for the now-defunct d8 magazine about his work on Dungeons & Dragons' Planescape. They discovered they owned and loved the same book growing up: Faeries by Brian Froud and Alan Lee, a favorite about otherworldly creatures.

They introduced their spouses (DiTerlizzi's wife, Angela DeFrancis, and Black's husband, Theo) to each other so everyone could bond.

As DiTerlizzi described the meeting of the couples: "Here were another set of nerds, as geeky as we were."

Black and DiTerlizzi work so well together that they moved to the same town, Amherst, Mass., and when they talk, they finish each other's sentences.

DiTerlizzi plotted out the book like a chess game, and Black worried about character development, especially Jared, who always is in trouble.

A snippet from an interview demonstrates how they have developed a kind of shorthand with each other. DiTerlizzi: "I kept asking, 'Where's the innermost cave?' " Black: "Well, Jared's very angry right now."

DiTerlizzi dedicates the series to Arthur Rackham, an early 20th-centuryillustrator famed for his work on such classics as Peter Pan in Kensington Gardens.

Black, who says she grew up in a household where ghosts were everyday companions, dedicates her work to her grandmother. Black also is the author of the teen fantasy Tithe:A Modern Faerie Tale.

Black and DiTerlizzi say this is the end of the Grace children's story: They don't want to put Jared, Simon and Mallory through any more torture.

But it is not the end of tales from Spiderwick. Coming next summer: The Spiderwick Chronicles: Notebook for Fantastical Observations, an illustrated journal for children to record their own spritely creatures — "strange occurrences in their yard, playground, so forth," DiTerlizzi says. And next fall: Arthur Spiderwick's Field Guide to the Fantastical World Around You, an illustrated replica of the field guide that the Grace kids discover in their haunted home.
 

I was in third grade when I discovered The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe. There are also young reader versions of the Dragonlance books. The Magic Tree House series was also very popular at the bookstore where I used to work.
 

The Magic Treehouse is a good series, right around 2nd grade level. Also the Goosebumps books are in the 2-3 grade range. The Great Kapok Tree A Tale of the Amazon Rain Forest and The Paper Crane are great standalone books. The Junie B. Jones series is good also (it starts more in the 1st grade level, but I believe the later books advance through 2nd grade).

Good Luck!

Brian
<><
 


I third the Narnia Chronicles, with one tiny caveat: they're fairly heavy allegories, and when I give them to my own kids, I'll want to be ready to discuss the allegories with them. Sadly, the allegorical stuff makes it difficult for me to enjoy them as an adult, but I adored them as a child.

Also consider Over Sea, Under Stone, by Susan Cooper, a delightful beginning to a fantasy series set in modern times; also consider anything by that paragon of sweetness and light Roald Dahl.

Well, not anything by him--his adult stories, often bloody and explicit should probably be off-limits.

Daniel
 
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I've heard the the Lemony Snicket books compared favorably to the Harry Potter novels. There is a movie adaptation of the first book coming out for christmas, which may be a plus or minus in your book. But I wouldn't discard them on that basis.

The problem a lot of people have with the Narnia books is that they are essentially Christian recruting material. That may or may not be a problem. Some people consider it to be a definite plus and others won't touch it with a ten foot pole for that reason.

Robin McKinley I remember as having written some good children's fantasy. The Hero and the Crown was one I remember from when I was a kid. (Thanks for the correction CCamfield)

I'd put in another plug for some of Anne McCaffery's younger stuff like the Harper Hall/Dragon Books.
 
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Rackhir said:
Robin Cook(IIRC, no relation to the medical thriller writer) I remember as having written some good children's fantasy. The Hero and the Crown was one I remember from when I was a kid.

I'd put in another plug for some of Anne McCaffery's younger stuff like the Harper Hall/Dragon Books.

That's Robin McKinley, but I think her books and the younger Anne McCaffery novels are both aimed at the "young adult" market, well, older than grade 2... although the same could be said for the later Harry Potter books I suppose. Anyhow, I think I read The Hero and the Crown in grade 7. It does have stuff in it which might be more comprehensible to someone of that age-primarily Aerin's relationship with Luthe.

But it's not clear to me whether the child will be reading the book or his mother?

The Hobbit is definitely good and a good book to read to a child at grade 2, but I think I'd have been hard pressed to read it myself at that age.
 

Yeah--I was a fairly precocious reader (read and understood a 300-page history of the world when I was in kindergarten), and I really struggled to get through The Hobbit in the second grade. I'd give it to an advanced reader when she's nine or so; if she can't blaze through The Book of Three and its sequels, she's going to have a hard time with Tolkien.

Daniel
 

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