Books
You can sort the list of great children's books, winnow it down by age and genre, or use Advanced Search to see many other ways to explore the Treasury of Great Children's Books.
An Experiment in Criticism (1961)
C. S. Lewis proposes that the quality of books should be measured not by how they are written, but by how they are read, that a quality book is one that someone, anyone, will re-read.
Read online at archive.org.
Author(s):
C. S. Lewis
Illustrator(s):
None
Watership Down (1982)
The rabbits of Sandleford Warren set out to find a new home on Watership Down. This edition includes maps drawn by Pauline Baynes. The cover art was first used for the 1973 Puffin edition.
Read online at archive.org.
Author(s):
Richard Adams
Illustrator(s):
Pauline Baynes
Little Men (1950)
Jo March has married Professor Bhaer and started a boarding school for boys on advanced lines.
Read online at archive.org.
Author(s):
Louisa Alcott
Illustrator(s):
Hilda van Stockum
The Story of a Bad Boy (1870)
A story of the author’s youth in Portsmouth, New Hampshire. The highlights are the snowball battle on Slater’s hill and the celebration of the 4th of July. Read online at archive.org.
Author(s):
Thomas Aldrich
Illustrator(s):
Anonymous
Day and Night Songs; and The Music Master. A Love Poem (1860)
This collection includes “The Faeries” which was illustrated to great effect by Richard Doyle. The cover image is from an 1884 reprint by G. Philip & Son. The text below is from the 1860 edition. Read for free online at Internet Archive.
Author(s):
William Allingham
Illustrator(s):
Arthur Hughes, Dante Rossetti, John Millais
Only Toys! (1903)
A brother and sister entertain themselves using their imagination when their toys come alive.
Author(s):
F. Anstey
Illustrator(s):
H. R. Millar
Vice Versa (1882)
In Victorian London, a father and son switch places because of a magic stone from India. They live each other's lives, therefore gaining a better understanding for each other before they switch back.
Read online at Internet Archive.
Author(s):
F. Anstey
Illustrator(s):
None
Tom Swift and His Motor Cycle (1910)
Tom Swift wishes for a motorcycle and his wish is granted unexpectedly.
Read online at Internet Archive.
Author(s):
Victor Appleton
Illustrator(s):
Rudolph Mencl
It All Started with Hippocrates (1966)
A very funny and warped version of the history of medicine.
Author(s):
Richard Armour
Illustrator(s):
Campbell Grant
Emma (1898)
Emma Woodhouse, handsome, clever and rich, fancies her self a match-maker, but after her first effort, she can’t seem to do anything right.
Author(s):
Jane Austen
Illustrator(s):
C. E. Brock
Mansfield Park (1898)
Sir Thomas Bertram considers he is bestowing a great favor on Fanny Price when he takes her into his home, but in the end finds himself in her debt.
Author(s):
Jane Austen
Illustrator(s):
C. E. Brock
Northanger Abbey and Persuasion (1897)
In Northanger Abbey Catherine Morland spends six weeks in Bath where she makes the acquaintance of General Tilney’s son and daughter. When the General invites her to return with them to Northanger Abbey she is prepared for all the gothic horrors such a residence implies.
Persuasion is considered by many to be its author’s greatest work. Anne Elliot ‘with an elegance of mind and sweetness of character,which must have placed her high with any people of real understanding’ is burdened with a father and older sister given over to self-love and fashion. Persuaded in the first flowering of her young womanhood to give up her engagement to a young naval commander with no prospects, she is forced now to see him rich and courting her brother-in-law’s younger sisters.
Author(s):
Jane Austen
Illustrator(s):
Hugh Thomson
Pride and Prejudice (1940)
When Mr. Fitzwilliam Darcy refuses to dance with her Elizabeth Bennett is confirmed in her prejudice that he is filled with pride. On further acquaintance she is forced to revise her opinion.
Author(s):
Jane Austen
Illustrator(s):
Helen Sewell
Sense and Sensibility (1957)
When Mrs. Dashwood and her three daughters find themselves in realtive poverty with only the income of ten thousand pounds ($100,000 per year in current money) to live on, she determines to move to a different part of the country, near a cousin who offers them a suitable residence at a small rent. The elder Miss Dashwood is already in love and her younger sister soon contrives to fall in love as well.
Author(s):
Jane Austen
Illustrator(s):
Helen Sewell
Jenny and the Cat Club (1973)
In Greenwich Village an orphaned black cat lives happily with her master, a sea captain. Still, the gentle Jenny Linsky would like nothing more than to join the local Cat Club. Can she overcome her fears and prove that she, too, has a special gift?
Author(s):
Esther Averill
Illustrator(s):
Esther Averill
To Tame a Sister (1961)
Margaret goes to stay with her cousins, but her two mischievous brothers come as well and threaten to spoil everything.
Author(s):
Gillian Avery
Illustrator(s):
John Verney
Buttons (1938)
After experiencing a tough neighborhood growing up, an alley cat finally finds a home.
Read online at archive.org
Author(s):
Tom Robinson
Illustrator(s):
Peggy Bacon
National Velvet (1935)
Velvet enters her horse, The Piebald, in England’s premier steeplechase -- The Grand National.
Author(s):
Enid Bagnold
Illustrator(s):
Laurian Jones
Miss Hickory (1946)
Miss Hickory has a hickory nut for a head, but her body is an applewood twig.
Read online at archive.org.
Author(s):
Carolyn Bailey
Illustrator(s):
Ruth Gannett
Dusty Star (1922)
An Indian boy befriends wild animals and adopts a wolf cub.
Read online at archive.org
Author(s):
Olaf Baker
Illustrator(s):
Paul Bransom