HACKER Q&A
📣 leobg

Books you'd love to read to your 6-year-old?


Books your own kids have loved, books you'd want to read to your kids if you had kids, or books you wish your parents had read to you when you were little.

Am interested primarily in books rooted in the real world that kids can relate to. Like stories based on...

- the lives of interesting people (Semmelweis, Curie, or maybe even just someone who lived through interesting times or with an interesting outlook on life), - how everyday life looked like in the past and/or accounts of human history through the eyes of a child living back then, - how everyday life looks like today for kids in different countries, - travel, adventure and curiosity.

Fiction is also fine if you think the main character would be someone you'd want your child to spend time with and learn from.

The books don't necessarily have to be books written specifically for kids. For instance, I find that my daughter (6) loves it when I read to her Sebastian Haffner's "Defying Hitler", which I discovered here on HN. It's not a book written for children at all, but it's been one of her favorites for weeks now. She only understands about 90 % of it - but that leads us into some of our most interesting conversations.


  👤 spacedcowboy Accepted Answer ✓
If you’re talking 6-months old rather than 6 years old, “Go the fuck to sleep” [1] is a good one :) Audiobook version by Samuel L Jackson to boot…

Yes, I suspect the book isn’t quite what you’re looking for, but it is actually a very funny (if adult) book, at least the first time you read it…

[1] https://www.amazon.com/Go-F-Sleep-Adam-Mansbach/dp/145584165...


👤 tmaly
I can think of two.

The Book with No Picture is a blast for kids age 4 to 8. Mine have so much fun when I read it.

The Gruffalo is another a really great book for that age.

You have to add a good rhythm in how you read it.


👤 soueuls
Jules Verne - 80 days around the world - 20000 miles under the sea - island of mystery

👤 rahimnathwani
My 6yo and I recently read the first Harry Potter book together. We read it aloud and he read every ~4th page. It was fun but he didn't fully grasp every detail.

👤 kingkongjaffa
Fond memories of my dad passing off parts of the Hobbit as bedtime stories, when I got old enough to read the books myself I remember his accounts of various parts of the book (the trolls turning to stone e.g.)

👤 ioblomov
Flatland by Edwin Abbott, both a satire on Victorian society and treatise on (mathematical) dimensions.