Our top 25 read-alouds (ages 5-12)
Written by contributor Sarah Small of SmallWorld at Home
We started reading to our firstborn the day we brought him home. We didn’t start with Pat the Bunny or Goodnight Moon, although those both played an important part in our story time with all our children. We started with a college textbook, Western Civilization. We just wanted him to hear the sound of our voices and to get a feel for language.
Over the years we have read hundreds of books to our three children, from board books to great classics. Reading aloud comes in two forms in our family: as part of school (we have used Sonlight’s literature-based program for the majority of our years) and before bed.
Beginning at about age 5 with each of our kids, we moved from a diet of picture books and short easy readers to serious chapter books. Don’t worry about your child not “getting” a book that is “meant” for older kids. They will.
Around age 12 or 13 the evening reading aloud ended, followed shortly by the end of our school-time read-alouds. We are down to just one child who gets all of our reading attention now, and we are determined to have lots of reading time together until he, too, prefers his own voice in his head.
Below is a list of our Top 25 favorite family read-alouds. They are in no particular order, except that I listed a few series at the end. Why did these books make the list when dozens of others didn’t quite qualify? These are the books the kids remember with almost a tender fondness and sometimes almost awe. These were books we lived in, the ones that do, indeed, seem like part of our family.
Our Top 25
- Maniac McGee (Jerry Spinelli): A boy ignores boundaries in a small town, soothing racial tensions.
- The Wolves of Willoughby Chase (Joan Aiken): Wolves, an evil governess, nasty villains, and two girls who escape terror to find their true inheritance.
- Across Five Aprils (Irene Hunt): A boy grows into manhood as his brothers leave to fight in the Union and Confederate armies.
- The Witch of Blackbird Pond (Elizabeth George Speare): An orphan comes to live with her relatives in a Puritan town, befriends an outcast Quaker, and becomes an outcast herself.
- Caddie Woodlawn (Carol Ryrie Brink): Features the Woodlawn family, pioneers in Wisconsin. Caddie and her brothers have continuous adventures from possible massacres to prairie fires.

- Cheaper by the Dozen (Frank Gilbreth and Ernestine Gilbreth Carey): Forget the popular movie and read the incredible true story of the Gilbreth kids and their parents.
- Little Britches (Ralph Moody): In the early 1900s, eight-year-old Ralph and his family move to a Colorado ranch. Their life is full of hardships and lots of love. A huge tear-jerker!
- Hitty, Her First 100 Years (Rachel Field): From one owner to another, the doll Hitty sees tremendous changes in the world over the course of 100 years.
- The Phantom Tollbooth (Norton Juster): The classic story of the boy Milo, who finds his boring life interrupted when he travels to Dictionopolis and the lands beyond.
- The Wheel on the School (Meindert DeJong): A Dutch village joins together as it seeks to bring storks back to the rooftops of Shora.

- Follow My Leader (James Garfield): Jimmy is accidentally blinded by a firecracker. With the help of his guide dog, he perseveres.
- Small Steps: The Year I Got Polio (Peg Kehret): Tells of the author’s battle with polio as a young girl. Mesmerizing.
- Number the Stars (Lois Lowry): Annemarie and her family are part of the Danish resistance in WW2, helping to smuggle their Jewish friends to safety.
- Carry On, Mr. Bowditch (Jean Lee Latham): The story of Nathaniel Bowditch, an ordinary boy who becomes a pioneering navigator.
- The Sign of the Beaver (Elizabeth George Speare): 13-year-old Matt is left alone to guard his family’s new cabin in the Maine wilderness.

- The Best Christmas Pageant Ever (Barbara Robinson): The six horrible Herdman kids turn the annual Christmas program upside down.
- The Cricket in Times Square (George Selden): Chester Cricket tours NYC with his new friends Tucker, Harry, and Mario.
- Watership Down (Richard Adams): The classic story of rabbits who flee the destruction of their home, searching for a safe haven.
- The Hobbit (JRR Tolkien): Trolls, goblins, dragons, dwarves, and, of course, hobbits. This is the incomparable adventure of Bilbo Baggins.
- The Chronicles of Narnia (C.S. Lewis): My own personal favorite of all the books on the list. If you haven’t read them, well, please do.

- The Harry Potter series (J.K. Rowling): Adored by our kids and by us parents, as we experienced them together for the first time (and many times since then).
- Little House on the Prairie series (Laura Ingalls Wilder): I can’t imagine a girlhood without Laura and the rest of Ingalls family.
- Ramona series (Beverly Cleary): Ramona, Beezus, Henry, and the rest of the gang should not be missed. Henry Huggins and Ribsy were also favorites.
- The Boxcar Children (Gertrude Chandler Warner): Orphans Henry, Jessie, Violet and Benny solve mysteries and have many adventures. The first four books were our favorites.
- Charlie and the Chocolate Factory/Charlie and the Great Glass Elevator (Roald Dahl): Willy Wonka, Charlie, Grandpa Joe, and the Oompa-Loompas: what a crazy adventure. The books are madcap and hilarious but poignant.
I hope you’ve found a few new titles to add to your read-aloud time. What are some of your family’s absolute favorites?
This post originally published on April 6, 2012.

Oh my goodness this is a great list! So many memories from reading several of these as a kid. I am loving them all over again with my kids! Another few of our favorites have been Strawberry Girl, Stuart Little, and Pippi Longstockings. Thanks for sharing this! 🙂
This is a great list! We’ve read several of the books on this list this year. Wheel on the School and “Hitty” were both favorites of mine. I absolutely love the Betsy-Tacy series of books by Maud Hart Lovelace. I read aloud the first four books to my daughter when she was about 6, and she has now read those four on her own a few times. The remaining six books in the series would appeal more to a bit older girls (maybe 10+). I read books 5 through 10 as an adult and thoroughly enjoyed them. Some of the books on this list are new to me, and I think I’ll be adding some to our list of future read alouds!
The Betsy Tacy series was one of my very favorites as a girl, right up there with Little House on the Prairie! We did not do as a read aloud, but I introduced my girls to them to read on their own.
My kids are all grown now, and I have so many fond memories of the majority of the books you listed.
The Little Britches series we got on audio and listened to the entire series as a family. We still quote from those books today! “Wastin’, wastin’ I tell you!”
I love this list! My kids are younger (almost 4 and 20 months), but I have the same philosophy on reading. I did start out with the nursery rhymes, but quickly got bored reading them so much, so I started reading Harry Potter. By the time my oldest was 1 I had read her Harry Potter, the Chronicles of Narnia, and Pride & Prejudice. People thought I was a little strange, but she has a great vocabulary now 🙂
Heather–I love that you read Pride and Prejudice to her! That is fantastic! And yes, a huge vocabulary is another benefit of reading hefty chapter books to kids.
Our kids loved the whole Ralph Moody series. I picked up Little Britches from a library sale years ago and we were hooked. (That’s the same way we discovered Hitty – a library book sale.) Since we, too, use Sonlight there are only a few on your list we haven’t read. I remember the older children loving The Westing Game and Where the Red Fern Grows.
We need to read The Westing Game–thanks for the reminder! And Where the Red Fern Grows was definitely close to the Top 25!
We are reading the Westing Game right now. We started doing family read alouds again this year with my 14 year old, although he does lots of other reading on his own. We sensed the need for some more bonding with him, and he was resistant at first. We had him choose but now he looks forward to our after dinner time and we all take turns reading pages. It has been a really positive experience. Thanks for the great list. Lots to look forward to with my almost 2 year old daughter!
I love this list, because there are so many books I’m not familiar with. Yay for new book ideas!
We’re currently listening to the Ramona books on cd (a nice break for this introverted mama), and my 9yo, 7yo, and 4yo ALL love them. That is really saying something!
Read alouds end at 12-13? That makes me a little sad. I hope to keep it going longer, wishful thinking I guess.
You have a great list! We also enjoy Winnie the Pooh, The Hundred Dresses, The Indian in the Cupboard, and The Mouse and the Motorcycle.
I was hoping they’d go longer as well, Paula, but 13 seemed to be it. Just last night, though, our firstborn, who is home from college for the weekend, sat and listened in for a whole chapter of The Wolves of Willoughby Chase as I read it to his younger brother!
My middle child commutes to college. A few weeks ago he saw
Sorry. I somehow hit post while typing.
As I was saying, our middle son commutes to college. He saw The Hobbit in our pile of books that are to be read. He said he wanted to read it again, but was too tired to read it then. I asked if he wanted me to read it to him. I was thrilled when he said yes. So I began reading The Hobbit aloud to him and our youngest son who is 11. I loved that time together. I think my youngest will remember it, too.
Our oldest is 16, along with a 12 and 10 year old. We still do read alouds and they all enjoy it. On long trips I will read aloud until I can’t anymore…even hubby likes to be read to. We leave on a trip with my in-laws before long and have the last 3 of the Ralph Moidy books ready to go.
I smiled at what you first read to your newborn. My husband was in seminary when our daughter was born so she heard lots about historical theology and even some Greek and Hebrew before she could speak. She’s still too young for chapter books but I read several of the series on your list as a child and look forward to reading them too her too. Thanks for the additional suggestions.
Small Steps is one of my all time favorite books!!! I have read it sooo many times. I am glad your family enjoyed it too.
Great list!! Thank you! I will be referring to this list often. 🙂 We have read many of the books on your list, and are about to begin The Hobbit.
Love this! I am a huge Phantom Tollbooth fan and have read it roughly 30 times — in school, to my students, and to my own children. It’s one of those books that is so satisfying to read aloud with the wit and word choice (and, of course, the Humbug’s goof ball comments).
The Ramona books have been such a gift to me, both as a child and now a mother. No other series has reminded me so clearly of what it means to be a child and how a child views the world. Reading them along with my children was a way for me to share bits of my growing up years and to re-learn compassion for and patience with young people.
I love the Ramona books so much. Just the other day my 14-year-old said, “Remember that scene in Ramona when_______” As you said, the books are such perfect pictures of what it is to be a child!
This is a wonderful list! My 7 year old son was fascinated by the Little House series especially 🙂 Charlotte’s Web, The Trumpet of the Swan and the Anne of Green Gables series are a few more that are very high up on my list. Can’t wait to check some of these out – thank you for sharing!
Our kids (8, 5, 2) are eager for our “family reads” this year . So far we’ve read Mary Poppins (the original book, not Disney), James & the Giant Peach (one of my childhood favorites), Miss Pickerell Goes to Mars and Miss Piggle Wiggle. Currently reading The Phantom Tollbooth and thoroughly enjoying it! What’s up next? Perhaps another Mary Poppins adventure….or maybe The Borrowers….or The Cricket in Times Square…. So many books to share! Looks like I’ll have to add a few from your list to ours 🙂
Yes! Miss Pickerell goes to Mars. Thank you for the correct title . My dad read this to me when I was young and i have been trying to find it for my kiddos to read to them.
Try Polly’s Piralympics, it’s a new book out and part of a series about Pirates who hold their own Paralympic Games.
Going down very well in Schools in South Africa
We’re reading The Little Prince right now. I love the My Father’s Dragon series. Socks and Ralph S Mouse. Narnia. Mrs Piggle Wiggle. Roald Dahl is often read here, too. We read short-book series like Alice in Bibleland, Beatrice Potter stories and the Serendipity books more often than chapter books, though.
I thughot finding this would be so arduous but it’s a breeze!
My sister and I growing up loved two other books by Elizabeth George Spear: The Bronze Bow and Calico Captive. I definitely agree about the Chronicles of Narnia as well. Thanks for the great list! My oldest is just now turning 5, so we will definitely be adding some of them to our library.
I’ll add Enid Blyton’s _Famous Five_ mystery series and Julie Andrews Edwards’s _Last of the Really Great Whangdoodles_… and the Hardy Boys, of course. It’s fun to read these adventure books outloud which gets the whole family’s collective heart racing!
We’re really just starting to enjoy chapter book read-alouds with my older two children (7 & 5). So far, our two favorites have been Winnie the Pooh and Mr. Popper’s Penguins 🙂
I have to add the Mistmantle Chronicles by M. I. McAllister – we rank it up there with Chronicles of Narnia.
I use to work at a bookstore while i was pregnant so I feel like my oldest was raised with books while still in the womb. I can remember reading the little house series to her while she nursed. Now we are enjoying going through thre series again. We have also enjoyed Island of the Blue Dolphins and The Seven Wonders of Sassafras Springs. I am looking forward to reading my kids The Giver but it is a little old for them now. And Little Women is another great one.
Oh, Island of the Blue Dolphins! I’m surprised my kids didn’t mention that for the list!
Great list! Many wonderful suggestions. I read the comment regarding read alouds ending at 12. . . interestingly enough, I notice that the older kids start their own read alouds with the younger kids! My 12 year old LOVES to re read her favorites to her younger siblings. Just last night there was a rousing read of “Trolley Car Family” going on upstairs. I love that that is how they show love for each other!
More suggestions:
Great Brain series, Happy Little Orphelines, Twig, Judys Journey (Lenski), our all time favorite read aloud: Winter Cottage by C.R. Brink.
Happy Easter!
There are several you listed that I have never heard of!! I’ll have to check these out!
Oh, Oh, I forgot, The Witch of Blackbird Pond!
Great list! I LOVE book lists. To yours I would definitely add Anne of Green Gables, Emily of New Moon, and of course the Ramona books. My daughter still likes the Magic Tree house series as well.
Thanks for the list of good books. We just finished reading The Summer of the Monkeys by Wilson Rawls…The kids loved it!!!
Oh yes, while I love Where the Red Fern Grows, Summer of the Monkeys is so funny, but has such a similar feel. I wish more of Rawls books had been published.
I love this post! We too read to our girls (4 year old twins) constantly and began in the NICU with a few books when they were born. One of my favorites then was Winnie the pooh. We of course enjoy TONS of great picture books but this year I started reading chapter books as part of our bed time routine. It kind of happened by accident…. I am a teacher and had to read a book for school and like any kid, when I have to read something I really don’t want to, so I decided to read it out loud to my own kids and figured it would make it more fun for me to read….Needless to say my kids LOVED it and follwed the story much better than I thought a 3 year old would. After that they were asking for more “chaber” books! So far we have read: The Miraculous Journey of Edward Tulane, Ella Enchanted, The Borrowers, Alice in Wonderland, and are working on The BFG now.
excellent list! lots of classics and Newberys. I love the Newberys.
Hmm, we’re just about finished with Core A and I’ve been wondering what read alouds will be included in years to come….thanks for the hints 😉