Bedtime Books: Ramona Quimby, Age 8 by Beverly Cleary
Author: Amber
I’ve decided to share a little about the books that we read at bedtime as we complete them. It’s been an adventure for me to find books to read to my kids at bedtime - we’ve done the Bible stories and the board books and have let them read on their own, but I’ve really been wanting my kids to hear Jon’s and my voice reading to them in the evenings as they settle into their beds.
I’ve found that the kids settle down to sleep so much quicker when they have one of us in there, and I am hopeful that the drone of our voices reading will calm them further into a readiness to drift off when we close the book for the night. It seems to help us stay on schedule too; if the kids know that dawdling through bathtime and brushing their teeth cuts into the storytime, they work a lot harder to get those things done so they can get their full 15 minutes of being read to.
The first book I read to them was called Ramona Quimby, Age 8. It was an introduction to the writings of Beverly Cleary for all five of us; I didn’t read any of her books as a child, but heard much about them (then and now).
I LOVE the way that this book is written - it is easy to read, has minimal pictures that need to be shown to everyone, and the words paint the scene so well that it is easy to imagine how things are playing out.
Ramona’s attitude about stuff is so realistic of how I could see myself as a child acting, or how I imagine my own 8 year old thinking.
The words are a wonderful mixture of levels that make it easy for my 4 year old to understand the story but still make my 6 and 8 year olds think. That is exactly what I am hoping for in the bedtime story books, and it has proven to be a challenge to find other books that act in the same way.
I will continue to post on the things we read and what I think of them; perhaps it will be helpful to another parent out there trying to find something to read to the kids at bedtime (or other times), and struggling to find something that will suit a variety of ages who are all eager to have storytime at the same time.





July 16th, 2010 at 3:31 pm
Tales of a Fourth Grade Nothing, by Judy Blume.
I remember enjoying this book, and Skye read it this past year and loved it.
Lots of humour about Peter, and his little brother Fudge.
Skye cried at the end of the book when Fudge ate Dribble (Peter’s pet turtle.) Otherwise, lots of giggles.
July 16th, 2010 at 3:47 pm
Daniel read that one last year and has read a couple more in the series. He really liked it too.
Jon
July 17th, 2010 at 9:11 am
One of my favorite books as a child and one that my kids also LOVED is Little Pilgrims Progress by Helen L Taylor. It’s Pilgrims Progress, but written for children. I just ordered 4 at Chapters, gave each of my kids their own and have one at home to read to my grandchildren some day. All 3 of the kids were thrilled to get their own copy - that’s how much they loved it! Very short chapters, not very many pictures but written so descriptively that you can imagine the whole thing without pictures.