
About a decade later than the original craze, Goosebumps fever has hit JAM. He found the shelf holding these gazillion books at our public library, and as a result his home bookshelf is heavy with some spooky fare. I admit to not reading any of these, but at the rate that he reads, I simply can't keep up with everything! A recent review book that I received, An Illustrated Guide to Mythical Creatures is also providing a whole lot of freaky images and stories for the oldest males in the house. Will D&D still be around in five years?? I wonder if we'll have a father/son team in our family...
We seem to be at the point where Red and Pudge are enjoying the same types of books, so they have a combo set of four books for this post, instead of their usual two each. The absolute #1 spooky pick this season is a library book we picked up last week, In a Dark, Dark Wood. The classic folktale is told in sparse language with yup, spooky illustrations and a surprise ending that necessitates this book being read about 73 times a day. The cool thing? Red can 'read' the whole story to Pudge, taking on a fair share of those readings herself. With the same folktale as its guide, Can You See What I See? On a Scary Scary Night is one of those search-in-the-illustrations-for-hidden-items kinds of books, which works on a small level with the kids at this age, at least for the easiest of hidden items. Mostly, we just look at the very detailed images and tell spooky stories of our own!
Two other books that I received from publishers are I Need My Monster and Spooky Spooky Spooky, which from the titles alone are obviously perfect for this theme! My review of these two books, along with an additional bonus monster-riddled book reviewed by Jennifer can be found here. The gist is that these are both really cute books, at different levels, but enjoyed by both my almost 3.5 and almost 2 year old little monsters.That's what we've been picking for our reading sessions lately. How about you? Link on up with us, won't ya?
Wishing you a spooooooky season of reading,
Whatcha thinking? I'm thinking you're a scary person! ;D haha! I had friend when I was little that loved to be scared out of their wits. I remember trying to sneak into a haunted house once but my friend's mother caught me and knowing my very weak tendencies, stopped me! ;) (I was mildly po-ed at the time though.)
ReplyDeleteHA on In a Dark, Dark Wood needing to be read multiple times a day.
LOL - D&D has been around longer than all of us. I'm pretty sure it'll still be around after we're gone.
ReplyDeleteAnd if JAM does have some interest in learning, I have a feeling I know someone who might be willing to teach him and run a game...
Spooky, spooky, spooky looks cute and right up our alley. These are all great titles for the season.
ReplyDeleteFun to be reading along with the season!
ReplyDeleteVery fun and spooky reads! We'll see if we can track some of these down here.
ReplyDeleteWhat a great collection of books. My Favorite Boy hasn't gotten into the Goosebump books yet, but I remember them being favorites when I taught third grade.
ReplyDeleteMister Man got some of the Goosebumps books for his birthday and is SO excited to read them. And I saw the I Spy one at our book fair (that I'll be working at the next 48 hours, yikes!). I can't wait to see what books I come home with!
ReplyDeleteThose look like some great Halloween books- I'll have to look for them!
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