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If you have a range of ages in your children and still want to attempt a family read-aloud time, then it is best to select a book that is interesting enough for your older children, but not too intense for the younger ones. You can expect that under fives will need a quiet toy to play with while listening since the lack of illustrations in moat chapter books will leave them searching for visual stimulation. A series can be a fun choice to read as a family since it gives your children more investment in the characters.
The number one series I recommend for a family read-aloud is Arthur Ransome’s Swallows and Amazons
The Good Master
What better choice to read to a Catholic family than a book about saints? Mary Fabyan Windeatt
Laura Ingalls Wilder’s The Little House
Reminiscent of the Little House books, the Happy Little Family series chronicles episodes in the lives of an early American family, the Fairchilds. Beautifully written, with characters that jump off the page, these four books are very enjoyable read alouds with great lessons and vivid descriptions of nineteenth century life. For example, in a chapter of the first book, Happy Little Family
Semi-autobiographical, Ralph Moody tells the gripping story of his family’s struggle to establish a successful farm out west. The series follows Ralph as he grows up to be the main support of his widowed mother, works on a cattle ranch, trains horses, school adventures, touring the west in a Model T, and so on. Little Britches is another favorite around here.
All-of-a-Kind Family
Depending on your children’s ages and sensitivity limits, C. S. Lewis’ The Chronicles of Narnia
The Happy Hollisters
If your children are a bit earlier, say eight and older, they will love the Letzenstein Chronicles, which begin with The Crystal Snowstorm
Another good option for a read-aloud for a crew of older children is Andrew Peterson’s The Wingfeather Saga. Read my full review here to see if it’s a good fit.
E. Nesbit’s books are great read-alouds for children who love a touch of fantasy in their literature. Her stories are not exactly a series, but some are loosely connected like Five Children and It
For animal lovers, I can’t recommend Marguerite Henry’s Misty of Chincoteague
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