A Playroom Bookworm

Last fall, I mentioned that as part of the psuedo-preschool I was doing with Ella, I had started reading aloud chapter books to her.
We started with Socks and then moved onto Charlotte’s Web (which is why Ella was asking for blood for lunch).
After we finished those two, I finally got to put up something I’ve been looking forward to for some two decades now.
In the Wisconsin house we lived in until I was almost seven, my mom made a big bookworm that circled the top of our playroom walls, listing all the books she’d read aloud to us.
I remember Stuart Little on there, along with Charlotte’s Web and the entire Laura Ingalls Wilder series(I still own that full set, which my mom bought from the library when they were replacing it).
Now, I finally got to hang my own in our playroom (I just traced circles with a salad plate, wrote the title and author in the center(ish) and cut them out).
We lost steam a bit after Charlotte’s Web, because Ramona the Pest just didn’t really hold her attention and we got sidetracked with the holidays.
Then, for Christmas, my mom sent Ella B is for Betsy and in mid-January, she requested we read it together. She loved it so much we read it in about a week (we’re currently waiting for the next in the series, Betsy and Billy, to come up at the library).
After that, we had the momentum to get finally through Ramona (Ella now marches around saying, “I’m the baddest witch in the world. Even badder than Ramona”), and currently we’re zipping through Mr. Potter’s Pet.
I’m loving reading longer books with her, and I have high hopes that by the time we leave this house in a year or so, I’ll have to remove dozens of circles from our bookworm. (I don’t want to talk about all the blue putty I’ll be painstakingly removing from the walls).
If you have suggestions for early chapter books, I’d love to hear them! This is a whole new world for me.

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38 Comments

  1. We just got "Alice in Wonderland" and "Through the Looking Glass". They came together in one book and my daughter begged me to read them every night (she's 4). We just finished those and I'm not sure what to do next so we are reading short stories out of her "Pinkalicious" book (she has a big book that has several stories in it).

  2. I loved that on your wall, but didn't even put it together what it was. Loveeee this idea. So I actually just started doing this with Charlie (but with Harry Potter) haha. A little advanced, probably, but I couldn't resist.

  3. My daughter likes the Frog and Toad books because she can read them on her own, but the stories are funny enough that she stays interested if someone reads aloud to her. We also like Ivy and Bean, Bad Kitty and a fairy series that I'm blanking on, but it's not the rainbow fairies. We have a crap ton of the rainbow fairies too, but while she loves them, I burn out on reading them aloud.

  4. I so wish I enjoyed reading aloud to the kids. It's one of my Lent resolutions (which is more how I do things) and I want to find a book that both boys will enjoy listening to. I was thinking Roald Dahl, maybe the BFG?

  5. Toys Go Out by Emily Jenkins is really cute! There are a couple of sequels. Also, the Mercy Watson books by Kate DiCamillo.

  6. I love this idea! My 4 yr old (boy) is devouring the Little House series right now. We've also started The Chronicles of Narnia with him. Loved Magician's Nephew and the Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, the Voyage of the Dawn Treader is harder read and probably a little mature for him right now. We also loved Charlotte's Web and Mr. Popper's Penguins. Reading aloud is probably my favorite thing we do together.

  7. My boys (4 and 5 years old) love Mercy Watson by Kate DiCamillo and Fortunately, The Milk by Neil Gaiman. We've had some good luck with Roald Dahl (Charlie and the Chocolate Factory) and some busts (The BFG) because the story just didn't hold their interest. While I love reading picture books with them, this transition to chapter books has become one of my favorite motherhood moments. I love watching them discover the same worlds I did as a child and now I'm catching my 5 year old reading under his covers after bedtime. I love your idea for the bookworm too!

  8. Charlotte's Web is next on the list for my 4 and 2 year old girls…we're just finishing up A. A. Milne's The Complete Tales of Winnie-the-Pooh. Love all the ideas here.

  9. I am curious what Ella had to say (or actually what you had to say to her) about Wilbur having to be "saved" in the beginning. Did she pick up on that or did you all discuss it at all? My daughter knows we eat meat but I'm pretty sure she thinks we don't eat chickens from a farm, etc. It hasn't been an issue I have dived into or anything.

    As far as books go, we have started reading the Mercy Watson books by Kate DeCamillo. They are so great! Plus, they are short enough to finish in one sitting (although we normally read 3 chapters at a time and then stop). They are obviously shorter books than you have been reading, but they are hilarious, vastly entertaining, and have wonderful illustrations!

  10. I second Mr. Popper's Penguins and Mrs. Piggle Wiggle. Those were huge hits around here. Others that he's loved (granted, Jonah is a bit older) either as read aloud or audio book for car rides are the Magic Treehouse series, some Roald Dahl books (The Fantastic Mr. Fox, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory [but not the sequel], and the BFG..but not so much Matilda or the Witches or James and the Giant Peach at this point), and the Magic Wishing Chair. I'm loving these ideas from everyone else, too!

  11. It's not a chapter book, but have you read Barbara Cooney's Miss Rumphius? The story is lovely, and her illustrations are beyond beautiful. I have a signed copy from when I was a little girl, and I'm giving serious thought to buying a second copy to pull apart and frame some of the pages in baby's room (though I don't know if I can bring myself to destroy a book!)

  12. Winnie-the-pooh is so charming, my boys looked forward to it every night. In fact, it's what made my 4 year old boy finally fall in love with books. We also loved The Wind in the Willows, Stuart Little, The Jungle Book, and the audio version of The BFG.

  13. I was going to ask YOU for suggestions. And I also have no idea when he will be ready for it, definitely not just yet.

  14. Oh I love it! And my heart skipped a beat over B is for Betsy. I found some of the old hard back ones at a used book store and they are prized posessions:) Favorite childhood read!

  15. Amelia Bedelia, The Tale of Despereaux, Because of WinnDixie, Magic Tree House. Those are all ones that I liked when I was a little kid 🙂

  16. My kinder kids always loved Freckle Juice, Junie B, and the Ramona books. I've been on the fence about starting chapter books with my three year old; he loves reading and books, I'm not sure why I'm hesitant.

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