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View Full Version : Books of your youth. What really stood out to you?


Paco
08-31-2009, 04:52 AM
Anyone remember this one?

http://www.fuddytv.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2009/02/scary_stories1.jpg

Man I used to love that trilogy of books. I read the stories so many times that I can actually recite the stories to my nieces and nephews. Not word for word, but the general gist of them.

Paco
08-31-2009, 05:00 AM
Maybe I should have slanted this topic towards books that were read when you were under twelve years old. Maybe ten as a cutoff as youth is subjective. Oh well, since I stated youth then everything under the age of 28 is fair game.

Loonknight
08-31-2009, 05:40 AM
I enjoyed "Dragon's Blood" and the sequels by Jane Yolen. Then moved on to "Necroscope" by Brian Lumely (This series got me into a bit of trouble at school considering the cover, but nowadays shouldn't merit too much attention).

Dragon's Blood
http://g-ecx.images-amazon.com/images/G/01/ciu/01/f8/4e22224128a04b2bb5dab010.L._SL500_AA240_.jpg

Necroscope

http://www.fantasticfiction.co.uk/images/n0/n851.jpg

pitfallharry219
08-31-2009, 05:50 AM
Where the Red Fern Grows - I cried like a bitch when -SPOILER ALERT- the dogs died.

Bridge to Terabithia - This was so much better than the shitty movie they made a couple years ago.

I also loved to read the Boxcar Children series when I was 8 or 9.

Rocko
08-31-2009, 06:19 AM
OP, is that the one where there's a story about meeting dudes with increasing larger, more grotesque teeth? And one about a girl whose head is held on by a scarf? I loved that book.

Mr Unoriginal
08-31-2009, 07:10 AM
OP, is that the one where there's a story about meeting dudes with increasing larger, more grotesque teeth? And one about a girl whose head is held on by a scarf? I loved that book.

No, that is "In a Dark, Dark Room" and that book is one that stuck with me as well. The scarf story really gave me nightmares when I first read it. Damn, Rocko, this is exactly the book I was thinking of when I clicked on this thread.

Maklershed
08-31-2009, 09:18 AM
Hmm .. The Hardy Boys, Garfield, Calvin and Hobbes, Encyclopedia Brown, and The Five Chinese Brothers all come to mind.

Niwen Starfire
08-31-2009, 09:29 AM
I also read the Boxcar children when I was younger, as well as the Hardy Boys, Nancy Drew, and Animorphs. Later on I started reading mainly science fiction and fantasy.

Brak
08-31-2009, 09:31 AM
I used to read the shit out of the Charlie Brown Encyclopedias, Peanuts and drawing / cartooning books.

As far as childhood goes, I loved this book (and my dad would read it in Grover's voice):

http://www.ninagambone.com/images/grover.jpg

Maklershed
08-31-2009, 09:31 AM
Did anyone else have scholastic book fairs at their school?

We also had a scholastic readers thing where you read so many books and you'd get free pizza at Pizza Hut. Only problem is that we didn't (and still don't) have any Pizza Huts near us. :lol:

beerme
08-31-2009, 09:33 AM
My Teacher is an Alien

Brak
08-31-2009, 09:33 AM
Yeah. I loved Scholastic book fairs.

I used to look forward to those monthly catalogs, so I could beg my parents for The Far Side compilations, while the other jokers in my class would order Lamborghini and Michael Jordan posters.

Maklershed
08-31-2009, 09:38 AM
That is exactly how it was for me too.

Malik112099
08-31-2009, 09:58 AM
Anything Shel Silverstein and The Necronimicon

munch
08-31-2009, 09:59 AM
Yeah. I loved Scholastic book fairs.

I used to look forward to those monthly catalogs, so I could beg my parents for The Far Side compilations, while the other jokers in my class would order Lamborghini and Michael Jordan posters.

I remember this one stole a Super Mario Bros. book from me that I ordered from one of those fairs. I was in the second grade and didn't understand. I looked at him and said, "But why did you do that?"

Nibi
08-31-2009, 10:11 AM
As a city kid I loved books about the wilderness. So for me it was My Side of the Mountain and Hatchet.

mykevermin
08-31-2009, 10:17 AM
Pretty sure I got the "Worlds of Power: Castlevania" novel from one of those book orders.

Johnny Tremain
Red Badge of Courage
Killing Mr Griffin
Gulliver's Travels
Pet Sematary
Things Fall Apart
Chronicles of Narnia
The entire "Alfred Hitchcock and the Three Investigators" series

...kinda feel lame that I can't think of others.

Maklershed
08-31-2009, 10:20 AM
Anyone else get a bunch of choose your own adventure books too?

sonderiaom
08-31-2009, 10:24 AM
Mine was Animorphs, I still have every single one in a box somewhere.

Filler2001
08-31-2009, 11:15 AM
Anyone else get a bunch of choose your own adventure books too?
I loved those - I had like 20 Goosebumps ones.

Also loved Where the Wild Things Are, regular goosebumps, Shel Silverstein, Garfield, and I loved Animorphs

cgarb84
08-31-2009, 12:34 PM
The Hardy Boys, Boxcar Children, Calvin and Hobbes, Garfield, Berenstein Bears, ect. Ah so many good times there.

Ugamer_X
08-31-2009, 01:23 PM
http://www.geocities.com/nguyenld2003/fudge-a-mania.JPG

Purple Flames
08-31-2009, 01:24 PM
- The Fright Time Books
- The Worst Person in the World
- Mufaro's Beautiful Daughters
- Where the Wild Things Are
- The Contender
- The House of Dies Drear
- Various books on Greek Mythology

opterasis
08-31-2009, 01:32 PM
Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs was my favorite book growing up.

help1
08-31-2009, 01:35 PM
Goosebumps, Captain Underpants, The Outsiders.

lokizz
08-31-2009, 02:27 PM
Anyone remember this one?

http://www.fuddytv.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2009/02/scary_stories1.jpg

Man I used to love that trilogy of books. I read the stories so many times that I can actually recite the stories to my nieces and nephews. Not word for word, but the general gist of them.


awesome choice i used to read that all the time.other books tha stand out in my mind are

Amelia Bedelia books

Where the Wild Things Are

Roll of Thunder Hear my Cry

The Color Purple

Encyclopedia Brown

Choose your own adventure books

Pig Out Inn

Mostly Michael

Stone Soup

How to Draw Books

Time Life Mysteries of the Unknown

Harris and Me ( read this a few years ago its a kids book but damn funny worth reading if you want to laugh your ass off).

theres 2 other books that i cant recall the title. One had 2 kids spending the summer on a relatives farm and the boy gets some glasses and finds out her can do magic in the book her turns a broom into a motorcycle and creates in ice cream out of thin air.

the other has a kid who beieves his babysitter is a witch and there was a pizza and a werewolf involved.

oh yeah in junior high we had these mini horror books about the size of a ds game manual maybe 25 pages in length alot of great stories.

and in elementary our school had these weird cartoon hard cover books on inventors on in particular i always remember was about Louis Pasteur because in the book theres a kid teasing a rabid dog with a stick , the dog breaks out and bites him and he gets sick and is treated with pasteur's cure for rabies. the kid had this wicked gash on his leg but after he and the dog are treated theyre all happy.

Maklershed
08-31-2009, 02:36 PM
Time Life Mysteries of the Unknown


Oh shit I think I read these. Weren't they presented like encyclopedias but it was nonsense stuff like Atlantis, alien visits, Nazca lines, the crystal skull, etc?

Dead of Knight
08-31-2009, 02:36 PM
Definitely Scary Stories as mentioned in the OP. Goosebumps as well. I loved horror as a kid, still do but I'm out of that "curious" stage. Loved scary books, movies, Are You Afraid of the Dark?, etc, etc.

Rocko
08-31-2009, 02:36 PM
No, that is "In a Dark, Dark Room" and that book is one that stuck with me as well. The scarf story really gave me nightmares when I first read it. Damn, Rocko, this is exactly the book I was thinking of when I clicked on this thread.
Ah, yeah. I read that book so many time as a kid. So great.

Maklershed
08-31-2009, 02:39 PM
Did that Scary Stories book have a story about a kid that was dared to go into a graveyard and put a knife into the one grave but he accidentally pins his coat to the ground and he thinks he's being pulled down by a hand?

lokizz
08-31-2009, 02:42 PM
Oh shit I think I read these. Weren't they presented like encyclopedias but it was nonsense stuff like Atlantis, alien visits, Nazca lines, the crystal skull, etc?


yep damn commercial was on tv all the time my school had a few of them those kinds of books are why i got into that kind of stuff.

Paco
08-31-2009, 02:52 PM
Did that Scary Stories book have a story about a kid that was dared to go into a graveyard and put a knife into the one grave but he accidentally pins his coat to the ground and he thinks he's being pulled down by a hand?

That's scary stories to tell in the dark. It ends with them getting their leg caught in something, she believed that it was the corpse that grabbed her. It was the knife the held her there, but she died of fright.

mang9432
08-31-2009, 03:01 PM
Goosebumps
All of The "My Teacher is an alien" books
The Stinky Cheese Man and other fairly stupid tales.
I remember liking the Indian In the Cupboard books too

Liquid 2
08-31-2009, 04:06 PM
The Dark is Rising Sequence.

NeoFrank1
08-31-2009, 04:21 PM
Anyone remember this one?

http://www.fuddytv.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2009/02/scary_stories1.jpg



Were those illustrations by Stephen Gammell the freakiest things you've ever seen (especially at 8 years old) or what??

fart_bubble
08-31-2009, 04:37 PM
off the top of my head:

Frank Miller's Hard Boiled (wore out the cover of issue 3 shirt in grade school)
Clive Barker's Books Of Blood
Neil Gaiman's Sandman
Norton Juster's ThePhantom Tollbooth
Lewis's Chronicles Of Narnia
Naylor's Shiloh
Alvin Schwartz's the Scary Stories To Tell In The Dark series
Shel Silverstein's Where The Sidewalk Ends
Shel Silverstein's Light In The Attic
Douglas Preston's Dinosaurs In The Attic
Orson Scott Card's Ender's Game
Heinlein's Starship Troopers
Doyle's Sherlock Holmes series
Doyle's Lost World
Doyle's The Hound of the Baskervilles
Dicken's Christmas Carrol
Stevenson's Treasure Island
Tolkien's Lord Of The Rings
Jack McKinney's Robotech: Genesis
Doc Savage series
The Shadow series
Lord Dunsany's Time And The Gods
Lord Dunsany's Fifty One Tales
a couple of Lovecraft collections
Robert Bloch's Night Of The Ripper
Robert Bloch's The Opener Of The Way

there are a lot more but I'll have to sit and think about it

Were those illustrations by Stephen Gammell the freakiest things you've ever seen (especially at 8 years old) or what??

My aunt got me an original ink drawing from him (meet him at a teaching convention)

winterice
08-31-2009, 04:49 PM
There's only two books I really remember from my youth but I can't remember who wrote them or the title.

One book was about a kid or maybe a pair of kids that went on an adventure in some type of fantasy land. I remember one scene where they are eating and what was serve was the actual name of a dish instead of the dish itself. For example, you order steak and you get the word steak and it tastes like steak. There was also a soup in the story called subtraction soup and the more the main characters ate it the more hungry they got.

The second book took place in a black and white world. The people in this world were place into occupation when they got to a certain age, I can't remember what age that was. I do remember that one occupation was for women to give birth. The main character was this kid who got chosen to be the successor to an old guy who held a important position. Basically, what that job was, was to remember what the world wasn't black and white. As the story progress, the old man passes on this knowledge and the kid starts to see color in his world and experience emotions like pain.

Rodimus
08-31-2009, 05:29 PM
http://www.fuddytv.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2009/02/scary_stories1.jpg

Those illustrations creeped me the f*** out as a kid. There was a picture where spiders burst out of a girls face that horrified me as a child.

I loved The Giving Tree. This is an excellent yet simple book for kids.

http://parsonspr.files.wordpress.com/2008/12/the-giving-tree.jpg

Mr Unoriginal
08-31-2009, 05:30 PM
There's only two books I really remember from my youth but I can't remember who wrote them or the title.

One book was about a kid or maybe a pair of kids that went on an adventure in some type of fantasy land. I remember one scene where they are eating and what was serve was the actual name of a dish instead of the dish itself. For example, you order steak and you get the word steak and it tastes like steak. There was also a soup in the story called subtraction soup and the more the main characters ate it the more hungry they got.

This sounds like "The Phantom Tollbooth" The main character's name was Milo and the book was based on jokes using puns and things like that.

cdubb1605
08-31-2009, 05:58 PM
The Outsiders

Liquid 2
08-31-2009, 06:13 PM
There's only two books I really remember from my youth but I can't remember who wrote them or the title.

One book was about a kid or maybe a pair of kids that went on an adventure in some type of fantasy land. I remember one scene where they are eating and what was serve was the actual name of a dish instead of the dish itself. For example, you order steak and you get the word steak and it tastes like steak. There was also a soup in the story called subtraction soup and the more the main characters ate it the more hungry they got.This is a shot in the dark, since I don't remember the book I'm about to guess very much at all, but was it The Phantom Tollbooth?

The second book took place in a black and white world. The people in this world were place into occupation when they got to a certain age, I can't remember what age that was. I do remember that one occupation was for women to give birth. The main character was this kid who got chosen to be the successor to an old guy who held a important position. Basically, what that job was, was to remember what the world wasn't black and white. As the story progress, the old man passes on this knowledge and the kid starts to see color in his world and experience emotions like pain.
The Giver, by Lois Lowry.

keithp
08-31-2009, 06:35 PM
The Three Investigators
Hardy Boys
Harriet the Spy
Have Space Suit, Will Travel
Encyclopedia Brown
Sherlock Holmes
A Wrinkle in Time

are some of the ones I enjoyed as a kid.

winterice
08-31-2009, 06:35 PM
Thanks. You're both right. The first book is called The Phantom Tollbooth. The Giver is the second book and Wikipedia says it's a trilogy too; loosely connected though. I might have to make time to read these again.

cletus
08-31-2009, 07:14 PM
Wow what a nostalgic thread. I had forgotten most of these books until now. I used to be a big bookworm as a kid but just don't have the time to curl up with a book anymore. I can't think of anything new to add other then I've read most of the stuff listed so far.

olde_english
08-31-2009, 07:30 PM
I used to love Roald Dahl books, like George's Marvellous Medicine and The Enormous Crocodile. Those stories have just the right amount of "yuk" in them and evoke belly laughs when read aloud.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iCvg_y-jgpI

Lieutenant Dan
08-31-2009, 07:31 PM
In a Dark, Dark Room
The Redwall Series

gindias
08-31-2009, 07:31 PM
Lord of the Flies
Lolita
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest
Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas

ananag112
08-31-2009, 07:53 PM
Roald Dahl books (Matilda, The BFG, James and the Giant Peach, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory were some of my favorites)

Goosebumps (especially the choose your own adventure ones)

The Redwall series

Skinnybones

mission42
08-31-2009, 08:26 PM
Chuck E. Beaver books were awesome when I was little.
Where The Red Fern Grows
Sideways Stories from Wayside School, these were the BEST!
Narnia series

Jhuntley
08-31-2009, 08:48 PM
Any Dr. Seuss and The Outsiders. I guess I liked the Wayside School books too when I was in elementary and middle school.

neschamp
09-03-2009, 07:25 PM
There was one story that freaked me the fuck out as a kid from the "Scary Stories" books. I believe it was titled, "Harold". It was about a couple of guys (maybe brothers?) that lived together. There was a scarecrow on their property that ended up being alive/possessed. It would move around their house to different spots while they slept or when they weren't there. The thing ends up killing one or both of them. I might be remembering things wrong, but I that story was definitely unnerving.

Chairman_LMAO
09-03-2009, 07:50 PM
From when I was very young
http://images.smarter.com/blogs/Book111.jpg
http://miscmum.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/01/the_monster_at_the_end_of_this_book_starring_lovab le_furry_old_grover.jpg<---still love this one


A little older:
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/1/11/Goosebumps_-4_Say_Cheese_and_Die%21.jpg
http://www.harpercollins.com/harperimages/isbn/large/9/9780690046359.jpg
http://www.greece.k12.ny.us/ath/Library/bookreviews/Animorphs.jpg

crunchb3rry
09-03-2009, 07:50 PM
Anyone remember this one?

http://www.fuddytv.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2009/02/scary_stories1.jpg

Man I used to love that trilogy of books. I read the stories so many times that I can actually recite the stories to my nieces and nephews. Not word for word, but the general gist of them.

Fuck yes! I had two of those books. Loved them. The Giving Tree was good as a kid but depressing as hell if you read it now. Velveteen Rabbit was cool. Brian Jaques Redwall books. Where The Red Fern Grows.

Scorch
09-03-2009, 08:16 PM
The Giver was great. Also read a lot of the Goosebumps books before moving on to Stephen King books like Christine, The Girl Who Loved Tom Gordon, The Shining, The Langoliers, etc.

Chairman_LMAO
09-03-2009, 08:27 PM
Oh, I forgot all about The Giver! I just recently re-read it, and it holds up pretty well.

AnotherStereotype
09-03-2009, 08:33 PM
Johnny Got His Gun... I ended up picking it out for a book report in 6th grade. I don't know what I was expecting when I picked it up, but to this day it remains one of my favorites.

Going a little further back, pretty much every Goosebumps Choose-Your-Own Adventure... I still have dozens of them just sitting in a box in the attic... damn I loved that series.

Honorable mention goes to the Berenstein Bears series of books, since they taught me how to read and... like the Goosebumps books, I still have dozens of them.

lokizz
09-03-2009, 09:14 PM
oh yeah i almost for Hatchet. that book was the shit.

dopa345
09-03-2009, 09:26 PM
I loved the "Great Brain" books.

vasco
09-03-2009, 09:29 PM
http://i878.photobucket.com/albums/ab347/g-babyyo/wacky.jpg
http://i152.photobucket.com/albums/s172/DianaCpicz/lorax.jpg

The Illiad, The Far Side, any Choose Your Own Adventure and yes....Charlotte's Web.

JohnnyFoxDarko
09-03-2009, 09:43 PM
Goosebumps books, Choose Your Own Adventure books, Animorphs, Berenstein Bears, etc.

I also loved this book where everything was a pickle. Anyone remember the name of it?

XxFuRy2Xx
09-03-2009, 10:13 PM
I was also a goosebumps kid. I also enjoyed the Help! I'm trapped in (insert something wacky here) books. I actually read quite often as a kid, and even enjoyed going to the book fair held at school to buy whatever my mom could get me.

JolietJake
09-03-2009, 11:17 PM
I remember being in around 3rd or 4th grade when the Goosebumps series became popular, had lots of them. Also read Animorphs for a while, thought it was a cool concept.

RuzzT
09-03-2009, 11:28 PM
A good resource for books to read with kids is:
http://bookstogether.squarespace.com/

My first experience with The Hobbit...

http://img197.imageshack.us/img197/1584/thehobbitrankinbass.jpg

One of my favorite books as a 10 year old...

http://img35.imageshack.us/img35/3627/thebookofthree.jpg

And I'm pretty sure I read just about every one of the Choose Your Own Adventure series.

diaeresis
09-04-2009, 12:49 AM
I started reading Stephen King when I was 11 and had read over half of his written works (at the time) when I was 14. In retrospect, I wouldn't recommend that. I finally read the Phantom Tollbooth when I was in my mid-twenties and wished I had heard of it sooner.

The Hardy Boys, Dune, and the first two or three books of the Sword of Truth series were all magnificent. Wizard's First Rule was the most engaging of any book that I remember. The first few Shadowrun books (Never Deal with a Dragon, etc.) by Charrette and the first Magic: The Gathering book (Arena) were also ridiculously entertaining.

davo1224
09-04-2009, 01:20 AM
Indian in the Cupboard and Island of the Blue Dolphins

c0rnpwn
09-04-2009, 10:21 AM
Lot of good books here! I used to love those scholastic book fairs, it was like Christmas in school.

My list includes the aforementioned My Teacher is an Alien, The Giver, Fahrenheit 451 (read those two about the same time), The LOTR trilogy + the Hobbit (read those just before the movies came out), Shel Silverstein, RL Stine, some of the old toddler books mentioned here, The Stinky Cheese man was the shit, Star Wars novels (still shamelessly love them), and in class The Yearling (guilty pleasure).

Sofa King Kool
09-04-2009, 01:08 PM
Anyone remember this one?

http://www.fuddytv.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2009/02/scary_stories1.jpg

Man I used to love that trilogy of books. I read the stories so many times that I can actually recite the stories to my nieces and nephews. Not word for word, but the general gist of them.


I fucking loved those, though the drawings inside scared the shit out of me when I was little.

Chairman_LMAO
09-04-2009, 03:29 PM
Goosebumps books, Choose Your Own Adventure books, Animorphs, Berenstein Bears, etc.

I also loved this book where everything was a pickle. Anyone remember the name of it?

It's wasn't this http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sweet_Pickles was it? I doubt it, but those books were some of my favorites.

Someone mentioned Hatchet, and I remember all those books were great. My favorite was Brian's Winter, even though the whole thing was hypothetical.

crunchb3rry
09-04-2009, 07:53 PM
My absolute favorite book was Cars And Trucks And Things That Go. Richard Scarry was the fucking man! I loved that book.

http://www.ebooknetworking.com/books/030/715/big0307157857.jpg

Nirvanaguy777
09-05-2009, 12:47 PM
During my younger years I read alot of Goosebumps. When I got older I ended up reading more series novels such as Night, and The Color Purple. In Junior High School I found a copy of Fight Club in my schools library. Bizarre don't you think, but I read it, love it, and stuck with those kinds of novels. Now I read alot of scifi and cyberpunk fiction.

Nirvanaguy777
09-05-2009, 12:48 PM
A hero ain't nothing but a sandwich also stands out in my mind.

legonerd
11-02-2009, 12:08 AM
Little Fox Goes to the End of the World - Ann Tompert

I still have the copy from when I was kid. I tried to buy it for my nieces and nephews, but it is out of print.

Shrapnellistic
11-02-2009, 07:57 AM
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/e/e4/GYG9.jpg

Maklershed
11-02-2009, 10:05 AM
"dude" :lol:

Cowabunga!