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It isn't always easy to find the right kind of reading material for early struggling
readers. Yesterday's Classics offers two superb choices for your children that
are full of classic stories you might just remember from your own childhood; The
Primer and the First Reader by the authors known as Free and Treadwell.
The Primer is a collection of nine stories over 112 pages in a large
clear font with beautiful realistic black and white illustrations by Fredrick
Richardson on almost every page. The nine stories include: "The Little Red
Hen," "The
Gingerbread Boy," "The Old Woman and the Pig," "The Boy and the Goat," "The
Pancake," "Chicken Little," "Three Billy Goats Gruff," "Little Tuppens," and "Little
Spider's First Web." The stories are simple enough for a new reader and full
of repetition in order to help your child master fluency. As an example, here
is a brief section from the first story in The
Primer, "The Little Red Hen:"
The little red hen found a seed.
It was a wheat seed.
The little red hen said, "Who will plant the seed?"
The little red hen said, "Who will plant the seed?"
The pig said, "Not I."
The cat said, "Not I."
The dog said, "Not I."
The little red hen said, "I will."
My struggling reader was slowly making her way through the stories
in this book. She was gaining fluency and confidence as she
moved from one story to another. One day I found her atop the kitchen
counter with her head on a pillow reading it out loud to anyone
who would listen. She was reading to me with such excitement
and delight - I was laughing with joy! She was doing this after
we had already done our reading assignment for the day for
the sheer fun of it. She read half of the book in one sitting.
I cannot tell you what relief, happiness, excitement and gratefulness
to the Lord filled my heart. This is the first book that she
felt she could master--and she did.
The second in the series is the First
Reader. You will find
13 similar stories that steadily increase in reading difficulty
as well as 33 "rhymes and jingles" from sources like Mother
Goose or Christina G. Rossetti's poems for children. The illustrations
are by the same artist and in the same style, but there are
fewer of them in this book. Some of the story titles include "The
Three Little Pigs," "The Bremen Band," "The Boy and the Fox," "The
Town Mouse and the Country Mouse." "Little Boy Blue," "Blow
Wind Blow," "The North Wind," "There Was a Crooked Man," "Sun-Loving
Swallow," "Mix a Pancake," "Twinkle Twinkle Little Star" among
others, are some of the quality selections of poems and rhymes
found in this book. Here is a sample from "Once
I Saw a Little Bird:"
Once I saw a little bird
Come hop, hop, hop;
So I cried, "Little bird,
Will you stop, stop, stop?"
I went to the window
To say, "How do you do?"
But he shook his little tail,
And far away he flew.
-Mother Goose
At 128 pages, this is a marvelous resource for
your beginning reader. Yesterday's Classics has a unique and
important purpose for the books in this series: "...to train
children in reading and appreciating literature through the
reading of literature." They
believe that if you begin with good literature written in the
best language that you will be forming your child's taste for
future reading material. All I can say is that my daughter
is gaining confidence and actually choosing to read on her
own when only a short time before she was struggling and resisting
the written word. She finds the stories engaging and is eager
for the next one. Yesterday's Classics has a whole host of
wonderful books to choose from and I encourage you to check
out their website, but for this homeschool mother, The
Primer and First
Reader are life changers. Thanks Yesterday's
Classics!
Product review by Kate Kessler, Product Reviews Manager, The Old Schoolhouse® Magazine, LLC, January, 2010
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