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tagesmann
28th April 2009, 08:42 PM
From BBC News

Classic tales including Just William and The Railway Children dominate a list of best books for young readers, as chosen by children's laureates.
Just five of the 35 books - selected by Quentin Blake, Anne Fine, Michael Morpurgo, Jacqueline Wilson and Michael Rosen - came out in the past 20 years.
A fifth were published in the 19th Century, including the oldest - Charles Dickens's Oliver Twist from 1838.
There was no place on the list for any of JK Rowling's Harry Potter books.
E Nesbit appeared twice on the list - for Five Children and It, chosen by Blake, and The Railway Children, chosen by Wilson.
Robert Louis Stevenson also appeared twice - for A Child's Garden of Verses, chosen by Fine, and Treasure Island, chosen by Morpurgo.
Morpurgo, whose books include Kensuke's Kingdom and Private Peaceful, said he "lived and loved" Treasure Island the first time he read it.
"This was the first proper book I read for myself," he said.
"Jim Hawkins was the first character in a book I identified with totally - I was Jim Hawkins."
Seven of the chosen books were from the 1930s, including Ballet Shoes by Noel Streatfeild, TH White's Sword in the Stone and Mary Poppins by PL Travers.
Wilson, who chose Mary Poppins, said: "I would love to be Mary Poppins, admired by everyone, totally in control, never turning a hair even when flying through the air with her carpet bag and parrot-headed umbrella."
The most recent book to make the list was 2008's Mr Gum and the Dancing Bear by Andy Stanton.
Sarah Clarke, of list organiser Waterstone's, said: "I'm sure it will be a surprise to many that the list does not include more recent bestsellers like JK Rowling's Harry Potter.
"But it's great to see the laureates choosing some timeless greats like The Railway Children and Just So Stories and introducing them to a new generation of readers - that's what the laureates are all about."

megustaleer
28th April 2009, 09:18 PM
Sarah Clarke, of list organiser Waterstone's, said: "I'm sure it will be a surprise to many that the list does not include more recent bestsellers like JK Rowling's Harry Potter.
I don't see why it should be a surprise.
As we have seen with our own Books From Our Childhoods (http://www.bookgrouponline.com/forum/showthread.html?t=581&highlight=childhoods) thread, if you ask adults for favourite children's books you are likely to get a selection of titles popular when they were children 10, 20 and up to 50+ years ago. Or, at the most recent, books they read to their own children (and in my case that's still 25 years ago).

Rowling, Pullman etc will get their place in the nostalgia lists in due course.

tagesmann
28th April 2009, 09:36 PM
Jackie Wilson said pretty much the same as you Meg. And then suggested that in 20 years time a similar list would probably include the likes of Philip Pullmen and JK Rowling.