Friday, December 31, 2010

Colin's (Partial 2010)

                                                  Vordak the Incomprehensible: How to Grow Up and Rule the WorldProduct Detailsref=s9_simh_gw_p351_d0_i1.jpg


Enjoy!


This is only a partial list of what Colin read this year.   These are the books that he took AR tests on, plus a couple I could remember.   This does not include any book he read over the summer or any book that didn't have a test.  Still there are 54 books here, and only 2 are picture books.   The rest are chapter books, some very long.  


He read all the Percy Jackson series, and really enjoyed them, as well as both of Rick Riordan's new books, The Red Pyramid and The Lost Hero.  These, however, were not his favorite series.  That would be the Artemis Fowl series by Eoin Colfer.  He notes the most recent of these, The Atlantic Complex, as one of his favorite books of the year.  


He was also a big fan of the Heck books, and is anxiously awaiting the fourth circle in the spring.


It is clear from going through this list that he tends towards the fantasy - or I tend towards handing him the fantasy.  Which do you think it is?  At least 2/3 of this list is fantasy, although there are a few he really enjoyed that were reality based.  These include The Fast and the Furriest, which he just read and got a huge laugh out of and Oggie Cooder, which he enjoyed much as he did the Hank Zipzer books.


Arthas, well, what can I say, the boy likes WoW.  He  read this one faster than I did, and keeps asking me for more of the same.  We decided he should read The Hobbit first, get straight to the source of all the madness.


I got him to read a couple of classics this year as well, as you can see.  He enjoyed them all, although I have not been able to get him to read any of the sequels.   These include:  A Wrinkle in Time, Mrs Frisby, The Enormous Egg, and The White Mountains.  In addition he read The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe at school.  


What he is really enjoying at the moment though, are comic strips.  He keeps wanting the Sunday Comics to come to door on Sunday, based on promotional delivery.    He doesn't like that the New York Times that comes every week does not have comics in it.  He has read through all of Calvin and Hobbes, loves Foxtrot, and tries to understand The Far Side.  These have  led him to draw his own comic frames and comic strips, emulating those that he admires.  


I have provided links to all the books if you want to know more about them.  Maybe your 8-12 year old will find something among these that he or she wants to read.



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