I've written before about the summer reading club at the library when I was a kid.
Some places still do these but I think they've been jazzed up a lot, with "digital rewards" and you can log your progress online. When I was a kid you wrote out the titles of the books you'd read, and then usually there was a folder with "stickers" (actually: cut out bits of paper you colored in and then used a glue stick to put on the scene printed on the folder)
I think about the books, though. When I was small, I remember a few authors: Richard Scarry (The pictures generally carried more weight than the type there), and Beatrix Potter (in the little dark-green library bindings that were used back in the 70s for those, and that may have been my foundation of liking British literature, she used more complex words), and also Bill Peet,, who seems to be less remembered today.
Peet had worked for Disney and (IIRC) quit around the time of the strike, and started writing childrens' books. Some of them had a fantasy tone; most of them were about animals. My two favorites as a kid were "Farewell to Shady Glade" (About animals having to literally hop a train - riding on the roof of a caboose - to find a new place to live when they found out their home was going to be developed) and "How Doofus the Dragon Lost His Head" which was about a (friendly) dragon. There was also "The Pinkish Purplish Bluish Egg" which was an egg that yielded a griffin.
I really kind of wanted a griffin as a pet as a kid, even though I was pretty sure they didn't actually exist.
He also had Capyboppy, which was probably the first introduction any of us had to capybaras (who are now a "hot" animal). I recently (in the last three years) bought the Squishimal plushie of a capybara and named him Capyboppy in memory of that book.
There were a number of others but those were my three favorites.
As I got older, I moved to "Chapter Books." Most of these were about people, who were less interesting to me (in general) than animals. Oh, I liked the Narnia books that had talking animals, and there was a series about mice who were kind of in a gang but weren't so very evil (It may have been the Marvin books by Jean van Leeuwen).
And there was Michael Bond! I loved Paddington, of course, but he also wrote a book called Olga da Polga about a guinea pig. I liked series books because it was nice to return to familiar characters; I read a lot of series books.
There was also a series about a girl named Katie John, who lived in sort of a rural area. I thought of her as living 'a long time ago' but her era might have been as recent as the late 1950s? They were mostly about her growing up (I think she was 10 in the first book, which was my favorite).
And All-of-a-Kind family, about a bunch of sisters growing up in a Jewish family in New York
And a favorite from earlier childhood, maybe one of the first longer books I read, was Jean Craighead George's "My Side of the Mountain" and I admit I wanted to run off and live in the woods every time I read that. (I still think about it).
There were other one-off books; a lot of them were shelved in "the Young Adult" section. I remember Summer of my German Soldier, which was pretty sad. Johnny Tremaine had its sad moments, too. (I think there was another Revolutionary-war era novel, about a boy going off to fight?). There were a number of so-called "problem novels" where I went "oh this book is about divorce" or "oh this is about a girl going 'too far' too young (I don't think any EXPLICITLY discussed abortion but I seem to remember one where it was implied) and I admit I mostly bounced off of those, they felt too didactic.
There was also some fantasy and sci-fi. I'm frankly surprised no one introduced me to the The Dark Is Rising sequence; I'm sure I would have liked it as a kid (and at least the first couple books would have been published by the time I was 10). And the same with Lloyd Alexander's Prydain series.
I did read the one with the Tripods - The White Mountains was the first in the series. It was fundamentally about how in early teenagerhood, kids were "capped" by the Tripods, apparently some invading alien force, and the "capping" basically was mind control. A few kids (the protagonist of The White Mountains and a few people he picked up along the way) resisted, if I remember correctly they had fake "caps" that didn't have the neural connections so they were still free, but LOOKED "capped."
That was my main introduction to dystopian novels; I admit I don't care for them.
MOST of those books were from the (old, back when it was downtown) Hudson Public Library, for most of my growing up the children's librarian was Marjorie Origlio (nee Grissom) and I LOVED her, she was a great librarian and if she had a hand in picking books, she did a good job, there were so many from that library I remember fondly. My family would go weekly - sometimes twice a week, if the weather was bad and my brother and I read through the books we had - every summer, and often weekly during the school year.





















