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A book loved in childhood: do you remember?

(197 Posts)
SofiaA Tue 16-Sept-25 23:37:46

I've been chatting with an old friend about books we read in childhood that were not heard of much nowadays, and we came to discuss which made a particular impression, and why.

I loved Cynthia Harnett's book called The Wool Pack. Its about a group of children in medieval England working against smugglers. It was different because it was of a different time and about different life style. It had a lovely cover, I remeber, and I think that at first was what appealed.

Love to hear what book was special to you as a child that now may be forgotten...

Dylis Wed 17-Sept-25 13:40:14

I loved our little local library. I think I read every Enid Blyton book available. Also the Jill pony books, Paddington, Borrowers, Just William and most of the children's dept.
I had huge trouble sleeping and would sit on the upstairs landing reading until my parents decided to go to bed. They were amazed when I told them many years later!

Cressy Wed 17-Sept-25 13:33:56

So many of the books already mentioned. I also remember the Silver Skates by Hans Brinkner and the Brer Rabbit books 🫣 which are of course now banned.

Gin Wed 17-Sept-25 12:49:14

The Box of Delights, read with my sister every Christmas, always with that tingling magical anticipation of the festivities to come.

I also loved books about the ballet and theatre, by Pamalas Brown and Hill , I have no idea why, never having been to see live performances.
I also loved all the Lone Pine Five books by Malcolm Saville . Every Christmas I got a Jennings book (by Malcolm Buckeridge?) which I found so funny I annoyed the rest of the family.

Nannytopsy Wed 17-Sept-25 12:29:01

The Weirdstone of Brisingamen by Alan Garner

Marmight Wed 17-Sept-25 12:17:19

RedRidingHood

Mallory Towers and St Claire's, I begged my parents to send me to boarding school. We were very poor!
Heidi, Black Beauty, all the Narnia books.
My absolute favourite was E. Nesbit The Phoenix and the Carpet. Loved all her books.
I nearly loved at our library, I can clearly remember the smell.

You had a lucky escape from boarding school RedRidingHood! I went and it wasn’t all it was cracked up to be. Sadly nothing like Mallory Towers 🤯

Marmight Wed 17-Sept-25 12:13:28

The Swish of the Curtain by Pamela Brown. I had great hopes of treading the boards. I didn’t, but a daughter did.
All the Cherry Ames books by Helen Wells when I was in my wanting-to-be-a -nurse phase. Then I discovered I wasn’t good with vomit 🤦‍♀️
Ballet Shoes by Noel Streatfield when in my ballet dancing mode 🐘
The Little Princess because I was named after her (my Mum’s fav book)
And lastly Heidi because I fell in love with Pieter 💙

RedRidingHood Wed 17-Sept-25 11:43:53

Mallory Towers and St Claire's, I begged my parents to send me to boarding school. We were very poor!
Heidi, Black Beauty, all the Narnia books.
My absolute favourite was E. Nesbit The Phoenix and the Carpet. Loved all her books.
I nearly loved at our library, I can clearly remember the smell.

Babs03 Wed 17-Sept-25 11:39:38

Scribbles

Babs03, I loved The Impossible Journey, too. It was lent to my mother by a friend and then I read it before we gave it back.
I was thinking about it the other day when I was told of a missing cat who'd found his way home seven years later. I'm off to Google and see if it's still available somewhere!

Look up The Incredible Journey, I initially thought it was called the impossible journey as well. I intend to reread this.

Kate1949 Wed 17-Sept-25 11:33:35

The Secret Garden.

henetha Wed 17-Sept-25 11:25:37

I loved Peter Pan when I was young and read it over and over.
I was convinced that I could fly and leapt off the bed many times in an effort to do so. The part where Peter tries to go home but the window is shut made me cry buckets.
Then came Enid Blyton. I still have the bookcase I was given for my tenth birthday to house all her books which I was given for birthdays and Christmas. And I was a frequent library user. I think I read everything by Enid which was available at that time. The whole wonderful lot.
I fell in love with Little Women when I was a bit older and so much wished I was part of the March family.
I still read as much as ever. It's a perfect escape.

GrannyGravy13 Wed 17-Sept-25 11:24:28

Squiffy

The Borrowers by Mary Norton. I am an only child and I so wanted to have Borrowers in our home!

Oh yes, I forgot The Borrowers ❣️

Squiffy Wed 17-Sept-25 11:22:20

The Borrowers by Mary Norton. I am an only child and I so wanted to have Borrowers in our home!

Scribbles Wed 17-Sept-25 11:10:49

Babs03, I loved The Impossible Journey, too. It was lent to my mother by a friend and then I read it before we gave it back.
I was thinking about it the other day when I was told of a missing cat who'd found his way home seven years later. I'm off to Google and see if it's still available somewhere!

dragonfly46 Wed 17-Sept-25 10:58:33

I loved Heidi and all the books about boarding schools.
Does anyone remember the series about the Cherry Family by Will Scott. I used to rush down to the library every week to search for a new one. I have managed to get some old copies of these as nobody else seems to have heard of them.

harrysgran Wed 17-Sept-25 10:56:39

Another vote for Milly Molly Mandy followed closely by my naughty little sister

Greyduster Wed 17-Sept-25 10:45:15

My constant companion was ‘Tanglewood Tales” by Nathaniel Hawthorne, which introduced me to the Greek myths. I was entranced by them then and have been ever since. I also read the print off every Famous Five book I could get my hands on, like so many of us. Out of interest, I read one of the updated versions recently and absolutely hated it!

Samsara1 Wed 17-Sept-25 10:36:32

Dormitory Wisteria. A lovely tale about girls school- all terribly upper middle. I longed to be able to go to Boarding School so read and re-read this book.

karmalady Wed 17-Sept-25 10:01:32

My teacher reading to us at school, The magic Faraway tree. She was the reason I joined the local library at an early age

Cossy Wed 17-Sept-25 09:54:40

All the Enid Blyton books, including Mallory Towers and St Claire’s.

Ballet shoes, The Little Princess, the Secret Garden, 5 children & IT.

All the Arthur Ransome Swallows and Amazons books.

Black Beauty and Heidi.

I adored reading and still do.

Witzend Wed 17-Sept-25 09:52:09

Mine is one nobody else ever seems to have heard of - Chalky, by Howard Apps. Published 1950s, an adventure story of two very ordinary boys who go in search of a long lost diamond. Partly set in the Essex marshes. Funnily enough it doesn’t really read ‘dated’, is really funny in places - a cracking read that I still re-read now and then.

IMO it would have made a brilliant film.

Funnily enough I found a spare 2nd hand copy for my brother - it still had the original dust jacket, and inside that was a list of ‘girls’ stories from the same publisher. Among which was ‘A Madcap Brownie’, which I’d been given at some point - it absolutely wasn’t a patch on Chalky!

TerriBull Wed 17-Sept-25 09:38:07

That's exactly the same as my hometown library GG, it was Georgian or maybe early Victorian building, demolished and a glass palace, on another site replaced it. It's part of my memories same for my parish church also demolished and re sited. Nostalgia for my hometown is bound up with both of those places they were the fabric of my childhood, but I don't live there anymore, and successive generations will have their memories somewhere else. Still makes me sad though when I go back to visit a friend who still lives theresad

JamesandJon33 Wed 17-Sept-25 09:28:03

The Silver Sword, by Ian Serrallier. I loved that book. I did have a copy but have lost it recently, or given it to my DGDs.
I also loved the ‘What Katy did’ series, and best lived in my teens Jane Eyre ’ Little Women,

Chardy Wed 17-Sept-25 09:26:10

Heidi

GrannyGravy13 Wed 17-Sept-25 09:23:21

Oh I am devastated, I have just googled that beautiful library, it has been done it is now plastic, glass and open plan, why?

Oreo Wed 17-Sept-25 09:14:54

GrannyGravy13

This thread is evoking beautiful memories of my childhood.

I lived opposite a very big London Library, I remember the doors into the children’s section which looked like ornate gates which was my happy place, I think I have read all the books mentioned on here and then some C S Lewis Narnia series over and over again.

The old fashioned library buildings were great! All that polished wood leading into a magical kingdom.