WELCOME!
Hello! I'm Christine Koh, a music and brain scientist turned multimedia creative who founded Boston Mamas in 2006. Learn more...

SPONSORS
CREDITS
Powered by
Movable Type 4.38

© Copyright Boston Mamas 2006-2013; a division of Christine Koh, LLC. All rights reserved. Terms & Privacy

« Thanksgiving Solutions | Main | Dear Boston Mamas: Prenatal Yoga »

Dear Boston Mamas: Books for Boys

elmer-elevator.jpgToday's Dear Boston Mamas question comes from Sarah via e-mail:

Dear Boston Mamas, I'd love recommendations for chapter books for boys; we've bled dry Captain Underpants, Stink, the Magic Treehouse series, and Diary of a Wimpy Kid. Since so many kids' book writers seem to be women, there is a preponderance of girl stories. HELP ME! I have two avid readers who don't want Ramona or Junie B. Jones. What to do???

+ + + + +

Dear Sarah,

Fantastic question! As the mother of a girl, I certainly benefit from all of those women writers, and I also understand why you need some inspiration on books for your boys. Here are some thoughts:

1. If you haven't yet explored Ruth Stiles Gannett's trilogy of chapter books about Elmer and his dragon friend, you should. These are actually my favorite of Laurel's chapter books (so, moms of girls, you should get these books too!).

2. I sent a quick e-mail to my lovely friend Gabrielle of Design Mom (she's a mother of six so, you know, she reads a lot of books with her kids!). She also said that the Elmer and the dragon series is her "very favorite." She also recommended the Time Warp Trio books for an older audience.

3. I floated out a query about chapter books for boys on Twitter and received a wonderful response (thank you people of Twitter)! Here were the recommendations that came in. Many of these authors have multiple books so I just linked up an example book or the first in a series. Note that I didn't link up the books you mentioned already depleting or recommendations for wee ones. Also note that I have not read/vetted all of these books myself so be sure to read the book descriptions to see if they would be right for your boys.

From @mactavish: "Catwings - first book"

From @SusanW:"Diary of a Wimpy Kid; Harry Potter (1&2), Percy Jackson (1&2), Stink (Judy Moody's brother), Superfudge (classic Judy Blume)."

From @DBcompanymom: "Phantom Tollbooth, Harry Potter, Charlie & the Chocolate Factory, The Doom Machine to name a few."

From @PaprikaPink: "Indian in the Cupboard series."

From @SSConservatory: "Some of our guys like Harry Potter, Diary of a Wimpy Kid, Jack and Annie (younger), to name a few."

From @AngelaWLaFon: "Oldies but goodies like Boxcar Kids and Hardy Boys. For beginner's the Arthur series chapter books by Marc Brown are worthy."

From @CapstonePub: "Try Jake Maddox books. And DC Super Heroes!"

From @J_keating: "Big Nate; Diary of a Wimpy Kid. My 7 yr old loves them!"

From @BravingBPS: "The Percy Jackson series! We're on book 2. My son is 4 & it's a little scary at times, but he refuses all other bedtime books."

From @bettyflocooks: "Superfudge by Judy Blume"

From @Sane_ishMom: "My boys love Diary of a Wimpy Kid and 39 Clues"

From @MauraCrabassMcG: "Early elementary: Time Warp Trio and Magic Treehouse series. Later: Artemis Fowl & Charlie Bone books. Matt Christopher is hit too."

From @soccermom434: "Magic Tree House and Warriors. Diary of a Wimpy Kid"

From @mootpoynt: "Here Be Monsters, the How to Train Your Dragon series, The Watsons Go to Birmingham, Hatchet, the Big Nate books; a young adult book called Touching Spirit Bear. Books by Rick Riordan, Jerry Spinelli & Andrew Clements...of the 3, Riordan and Spinelli lean more toward upper elementary. My son keeps re-reading all Riordan's books as he waits for sequels. They're fabulous. For fun and goofy stories, Diary of a Wimpy Kid and Megan McDonald's Stink series transitioned my son to chapter books. Truly, Brian Selznick's The Invention of Hugo Cabret is dazzling. When I taught 3rd grade, EVERY kid devoured it... even kids who didn't typically read for fun. It was the first "magical" connection my son had to a long chapter book. Another series that my son & many of his friends enjoy: 39 Clues. Interesting multimedia tie-ins, geography & intrigue. Also, a quick and delicious series (though a bit spooky): The Spiderwick Chronicles. And author Jon Scieszka has an organization called Guys Read with good recommendations."

These recommendations ought to keep your boys busy! Thanks again for writing in Sarah, and I'm super grateful to everyone who shared their recommendations!

+ + + + +

Have a question for Christine? Drop her a line! And of course feel free to comment in if you have recommendations beyond those made above.

Comments

"Gregor the Overlander" by Suzanne Collins is a wonderful series for boys (and girls as well). My son introduced me to it before we picked up Hunger Games. "39 Clues" is great and "Fable Haven" and the "Percy Jackson" series are among several more of his favorites to read.Hope that helps a bit.

Trust me: those of us who write books are trying to get them out there! I have a great MG/YA series for boys that my agent is trying to get picked up right now and is running smack into walls because most publishers simultaneously do the majority of books for girls and then whine that they don't have anything for boys. It's a completely bonkers situation and extremely frustrating to say the least! As your son gets older, he'll really enjoy the Ranger's Apprentice series and the Alex Rider books. They're crazy fun reads!

best of luck,
Jon

My six year old son enjoys "Nate the Great" and "Jigsaw Jones" series. The Hardy Boys has a new series for the younger set, "Hardy Boys: Secret Files." We have also discovered a british series, "Dragons of Wayward Crescent." that my son was over the moon for. It is being released in the US, but we got the series from an online distributor.

Remember that Beezus and Ramona have a neighbor named Henry Higgins; several of the books are about him. I try to find books for my boy that have active girl leads and boys; there have been several studies lately showing that about a fifth of characters in kids' movies are girls, and the rate of skin-showing clothing is the same as in R rated movies. That's not the view of the world I want my son to grow up with, and I want him to know about creative, strong, fun girls, so I really look to books as a way to provide that for him. Some of the series mentioned above--39 Clues and Treehouse have the lead roles pretty evenly divided between girls and boys. Then again, I do make exceptions--my guy loved My Side of the Mountain.
One other great direction is animal books--Stuart Little, the Wind in the Willows, Charlotte's Web, etc. were all fun for us.

I sent this to a friend with a 7 year old boy. She loved the list and suggest I add these.

Geronimo Stilton series (early independent reader - but chapter book)

Any E.B. White book (Charlottes Web, Stuart Little)

"Joey Goes to Sea" -Villiers

"Abel's Island" -Steig

Goosebumps series

"20,000 Leagues Under the Sea" - Verne (we just edited [skipped] the long, dry paragraphs that catalog sea creatures)

The Great Brain series - Fitzgerald (fantastic "olden times" setting with timeless humor and situations - we edited on the fly for some sections)

"The Mad Scientist Club" - Brinley

Dan Gutman's The Weird School Series. My son used to HATE to read until I found those. He also liked the Dragonslayer Academy books

Post a comment

(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.)

SPONSOR Well Aware Ad- Boston Mamas.jpg

FIND WHAT YOU'RE LOOKING FOR

SIT DOWN, STAY A WHILE

POPULAR POSTS
Five Certainties Following the Boston Marathon Bombings
The Tooth Fairy's Going Rate
This is All Becoming Very Real
Books for Strong and Smart Girls
How To Make Butter
Minimalist Birthday Parties
Moving Forward After Miscarriage
A Day of Hope
20 Things To Do When School is Cancelled
Crockpots Are Sexy
5 Ways to Declutter the Weekend

THE BOOK! YAY!

MP-300x200.png
Order Minimalist Parenting via Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Powell's, or your favorite local bookstore! And be sure to watch the trailer!

AFFILIATES I DIG

HOWDY PARTNERS

BostonParentsPaper logo.jpg

Things to do Today