Postby the_wolfs_howl » Thu Jul 30, 2009 8:28 pm
Dr. Seuss (I taught myself to read with Go, Dog, Go!)
Bill Peet (I remember thinking the buildings always looked sad in those books, especially the one where a boy is trying to figure out what he wishes he was. The one about the mountain goat whose antlers wouldn't stop growing also made me shudder, because of the terrified expression on the goat's face.)
Stan and Jan Berenstein (I loved the Berenstein Bears books, because my family at the time was exactly like theirs - mom, dad, older brother, younger sister)
whoever wrote Mike Mulligan and His Steam Shovel and the one about the snow shovel - Katy or something?
Lois Gladys Leppard (I was obsessed with the Mandie books for years and years, from when I was nine till I was old enough to start fantasizing over the budding romance between Mandie and Joe.)
Jude Watson (He wrote the Jedi Apprentice books - all except the first one. I've read those books a bajillion times; they were practically my life for a year or two before I discovered Tolkien.)
E. Nesbit and Edward Eager (There was a period of my childhood where I read nothing else but these books where children find magic in their backyard. I longed to find a magic coin or carpet myself, but alas! I never did.)
Then in fifth grade, I was thrust into the world of fantasy with Lord of the Rings and Harry Potter.
You can find out things about the past that you never knew. And from what you've learned, you may see some things differently in the present. You're the one that changes. Not the past.
- Ellone, Final Fantasy VIII
"There's a difference between maliciously offending somebody - on purpose - and somebody being offended by...truth. If you're offended by the
truth, that's your problem. I have no obligation to not offend you if I'm speaking the truth. The truth is
supposed to offend you; that's how you know you don't got it."
- Brad Stine