Our kids have great books in their bedrooms, most of which they have read or we have read to them. Here’s how to accumulate books your kids will be grateful for:
1: Never buy a book by a celebrity
2: Never buy a book that is a numbered part of a series
3: Never buy a book that is tied-in to a movie or TV product
4: Let your kids buy (or borrow) whatever they want.
No celebrities, no series, no cameras: remember these rules of thumb and you will have yourself a powerful tool to help you when next you are standing in the bookstore, facing the 90% garbage that most booksellers offer our children. (Is any other group of consumers treated so badly?)
With these rules, you can quickly gather a pile of quality books to choose from: books that got onto that bookshelf largely on their own merits.
An objection could be made that most kids’ classics, The Jungle Book, say, or the Harry Potter novels, all had movies made of them. But, caveat emptor: the books under these names in stores today are often a shabby mixture of movie screenshots and insipid ‘retellings’. And look out for ‘abridged versions’: more grown-up stupidity dressed up as concern for children, the poor dears. The best place to find the original classics is in the library or by reference to the publisher: Puffin Books is one imprint I trust for editorial commonsense.
Rule #4 is vital of course: if they are doing the choosing, children should always be allowed to choose what they like, without any comment from parents.
Rules are made to be broken so, for instance, I would make an exception to #2 for the likes of Tintin and to #4 for material that is patently unsuitable and likely to disturb e.g. adult horror stories.
flickr image by mwoodard
[...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by Fin Keegan, Bosca. Bosca said: How to Build a Great Kids’ Library: Our kids have great books in their bedrooms, most of which they have read or … http://bit.ly/agrHUy [...]
[...] How to Build a Great Kids’ Library Love this! Read more… [...]