To start, there's a picture book geared toward the very young: Leo Lionni's Frederick. This fable really encapsulates what's behind capturing and representing experience in literature without getting all theoretical.
Another book that touches on a similar theme in a more extended narrative set in the past in a Jewish community is Pheobe Gilman's Something from Nothing.
While those two works are not as well-known as they should be, my next few selections are likely among the books you have read. They include:
Amelia Bedelia
The Snowy Day (wonderful illustrations)
Madeline
Alice in Wonderland
The Little Prince
A Wrinkle in Time
The Chronicles of Narnia
Matilda (I prefer it to Ronald Dahl's better known and more often adapted Charlie and the Chocolate Factory)
Anne of Green Gables
Not quite as famous, though still classic works include:
All of a Kind Family
The Borrowers
Five Children and It
A few of my favorites have been written relatively recently. They include
Wonder
Frindle
Holes
Everything on a Waffle
The View from Saturday
Note:I tried to keep to books aimed at children 12 and under to limit the list. It would grow a lot longer if I were to include the books marketed to tweens and young adults. Also I may add on more books as I discover or rediscover them.
Related post http://uncommoncontent.blogspot.com/2014/02/notes-on-amazons-100-books.html
Note:I tried to keep to books aimed at children 12 and under to limit the list. It would grow a lot longer if I were to include the books marketed to tweens and young adults. Also I may add on more books as I discover or rediscover them.
Related post http://uncommoncontent.blogspot.com/2014/02/notes-on-amazons-100-books.html
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