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First book you ever read?

My mother, with her well-founded inkling that I was an innate reader, twice handed me books to improve my reading level. The first one was unremarkable and more or less insipid. The second was Call it Courage. It was much more of a boys' book (me girl) and I was disinclined to like it, partially for that reason. But I did get through it and liked it enough to realize, finally, that there was a whole world of books and I could choose them for myself from a nearby library. I was seven of eight at the time.
 
kuroc said:
The first book I remember reading is Tales of a fourth grade nothing:)
I used to love that book!
I did this extravagantly over-the-top project on it in third grade. All of the characters were clay figures, glazed and fired, who lived in this huge lego house half my height. I was quite a feat for an 8-year-old! I was such the overachiever. I still failed the project because I failed to include character analysis and written report. I was hearbroken :( :( :( :D.
 
My first favorite chapter books were the American Girl series, when I was five. Don't know if they count as novels, but I loved them.
 
The first book I ever read was one of the Goosebumps books; I can't remember which because I've read so many since and it was so long ago. I was in first grade. Everyone else was reading Dr. Seuss if they could even read that, and I was bored out of my mind. But the teacher had read part of one of those in class and I liked it so I read the rest on my own. I'm sure I struggled through out, but I felt good about reading my first grown-up book and I went on to read many more.
 
I vividly remember, at age 4, looking over my father’s shoulder as he read the newspaper. I remember that the letters looked to me just like Greek letters looked, before I studied ancient Greek, as strange symbols, like sigmas and deltas for one who has never studied Calculus.

The first "grown-up" book I remember reading was "Cheaper by the Dozen". I was very excited to think that I was mature enough to read a real book. I constantly check the page number, to monitor my progress, and held the book sideways, to savor the 1/3 and half-way and 3/4 mark, and I would calculate how many pages remained until I was finished.

I did enjoy the book and to this day remember some things about it. I remember it being a light-hearted but perfectly serious book. I found the previews to the recent movie version offensive. They want to make it into a farce of clowns, to pander to the general public’s appetite for farce and nonsense.

By the way, the term slap stick comes from the days of silent films. Someone in the theater had a special device of two sticks on a hinge. During fight scenes, they would slap the sticks to create a sound effect of blows and punches.


Prior to that, I remember reading Stuart Little.

I was quite sickly as a child, and missed much of 1st grade. Somewhere between 1st and second grade I was assigned a homebound teacher. I remember her taking me into a spare room, where it was quiet, and teaching me how to read my first words, from a "Dick and Jane" reader. I was so proud that I ran out of the room to show my mother that I could now read.

In third grade, I remember reading "Wind in the Willows" and being wounded by its poignancy, but now at age 57 I remember little else that that sentimental feeling.


One sleepy summer between 5th and 6th grade, I went into a Drug Store and purchased a science fiction book for 35 cents entitled "Out of a Silent Planet" by C.S. Lewis. I new nothing about church or religion or C.S. Lewis. But, as I read the exciting story, I began to realize that something subtle and marvelous was being hinted at regarding God. I thought that this Lewis fellow must be quite clever and on to something important.

That same Summer, from the same drugstore, I purchased a paperback about a vampire. I was fascinated by monsters and vampires. The novel was not pornographic, but in one scene, the vampire has a woman who has passed out, and she is totally naked, and her breasts are described in some detail. This erotic passage was the highpoint of the book for me. I knew there and then that I wanted to become a vampire and spend my days peeking and unconscious naked women. I was an only child living in a neighborhood of all boys, so I had little experience with female anatomy aside from a few National Geographic photos. I raced to the public library and checked out Braham Stoker’s novel, Dracula. I was certain that there would be even better descriptions of all this nudity business. I reclined drowsily in the hammock under a tree, and read chapter after chapter of LETTERS! CORREPSONDENCE! When oh when would the good stuff ever come?! I read through half the book, and gave up.
 
First Novel

Read tons of short books but the first novel was Watership Down in 3rd grade. I still have my original paperback copy and I'm in my 30's now
 
Good Night Moon

That book will always be in my mind as the childhood book for me. I had the thing memorized! But the first "chapter" book I read was The Lion the Witch and the Wardrobe by CS Lewis and I was so pleased with the movie adaption I must have seen it 3 times in the theatre! Which is big for me considering I'm on a tight budget haha.
 
That same Summer, from the same drugstore, I purchased a paperback about a vampire. I was fascinated by monsters and vampires. The novel was not pornographic, but in one scene, the vampire has a woman who has passed out, and she is totally naked, and her breasts are described in some detail. This erotic passage was the highpoint of the book for me. I knew there and then that I wanted to become a vampire and spend my days peeking and unconscious naked women.
LOL. Naughty Sitaram. Maybe when you become a vampire you can turn me into one. *puts on fake fangs that slide over canines*
 
As far as compulsory books go, I started off with the Janet & John series (I think they're Peter and Jane now!).

I was very young when I read my first book (from choice). I've no idea what it was called, but I do remember it was about a pig! That was really very much the start of a life-long passion for me.

One of my favorites was 'Heidi - Johanna Spyri', which left me for a longing to go to Switzerland for years.

Apart from that, there were a couple of series of books that I remember reading.

One was a group of 5 kids (not The Famous Five!); I remember the youngest one was called Pip, and they were amateur sleuths who chased 'clues' and always caught the baddie before the local police.

The other was about a group of kids who were interested in bird-watching, specifically rare sea birds, but they got into all sorts of adventures while they were out scrambling around caves etc.

Many were the nights when I fell asleep with a book and a torch hidden under the bedcovers! (I had to do that, because my older brother used to still be out playing when I went to bed, and if he saw my bedroom light on, he used to 'tell'!).
 
Sofia said:
loved judy blume-'are you there god, it's me, margaret'....great book:D

I loved Judy Blume books! :D They are such good reads for young girls growing up. I wouldn't actually mind reading them again, to see what I think of them now.
 
I remember having a night-light and reading in bed, but don't remember the specific books. The earliest books that I remember was Mike Mulligan and his steam shovel, Ferdinand the Bull, and a library book about the Denver Broncos. Nothing that caused nightmares, though the way the Broncos have played the last couple of years, they cause many of their fans to suffer through nightmarish seasons.
 
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