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Features: Q— Photos and Inquiry by Julie Wiatt

What was your favorite childhood book?

Katie McLaughlin: "Katy and the Big Snow. Katy was the bulldozer. I liked that the bulldozer was named Katy. Also Caddie Woodlawn. It was one of the first chapter books I ever read. I read it in our cabin in New Hampshire. I liked that her name was Caddie and she was a tomboy in the late 1800s, my favorite time."

Donna Firer: "I read Nancy Drew stories nonstop all summer in middle school. I'd go to my friend's house and we'd get a blanket and lie in their side yard and read and drink lemonade. I associate that with the freedom of summer."

 

Tom Bryant: "McGuffy's Reader. I read it way back in 1929-30. I was just 6, just starting first grade. I liked how they humanized animals to show relations between humans."

Madelia Hayes: "I liked nursery rhymes the best. Tiffany likes to read her Bible."

 

 

 

Bryce Tugwell: "Island of the Blue Dolphins. I grew up in California. I could look out and see the Catalina Islands. I was an adventurous kid, and it made me think of going out and living on those islands."

Sylvie Briscoe: "The Secret Garden. Or The Twits, by Raold Dahl. I liked The Secret Garden because it made me feel I could do whatever I want, whatever I can imagine. I'd look around for secret gardens, and I found one, late one night when I was 18."

 

 

Mary Jane Muchui: "Charlotte's Web. I loved it because it showed that something like a spider, that people don't like, that they fear or hate, saved the pig Wilbur from being slaughtered. I like pigs. I don't eat them. I lived near a farm and got to know some pigs. They would come when I called, like dogs. I cried when Charlotte died."

 

 

 

Aristide Jude: "Dr. Seuss. Green Eggs and Ham, and The Cat in the Hat."

Shadi Bowlding: "Poo Poo and the Potty. It's a good book. They have it at the Takoma library."

Alex Musto: "Dr. Seuss. The Lorax. The story was so much fun, and planted the seeds of activisim in me. It was just so hopeful."

 

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