Happy & Brainy Group discussion
Literature
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What was the first fairly long book you enjoyed as a youth?
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Wy
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Feb 28, 2009 06:33PM

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Peggy wrote: "The book I remember most from my pre-teens is FOREVER AMBER by Kathleen Windsor [1944:]. Now, over 60 years later I can still see some of the scenes in my head."
That was a good one, I need to read that one again.
That was a good one, I need to read that one again.




Happy Independence Day Ilyn and everyone here!

_Little Lord Fauntleroy..."
I remember the point in first grade when I moved from struggling with "Dick and Jane" to rolling right through "A Fly Went By"--it seemed very long at the time. Sometime in second grade ('61-'62), I graduated to real books, the first being "Old Yeller." Why that? I have no idea why anyone would suggest something so sad to a seven year old. I probably grabbed it off the library shelf, liked the first page and just went for it, with no idea what I was getting myself in for. By ten, I read "Gone With the Wind," probably the longest up to that time. Motherhood was my introduction to truuuly looong books. In pregnancy, I read all the parts (3-4?) of Kristin Larensdottir (sp?) straight through, and then spent all those nighttime nursings reading "War and Peace." I guess I was practicing for being in for the long haul.
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Stephen Turner (other topics)Stephen Turner (other topics)
J.R.R. Tolkien (other topics)