Do You Remember These Iconic Books From Childhood?
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Question 1
What Treat Does The Mouse Ask For In “If You Give A Mouse A Cookie”?
Question 1
Who Wrote “The Polar Express”?
Question 1
Which Puppy Is “Where’s Spot?” About?
Question 1
What Do The Letters Do In “Chicka Chicka Boom Boom”?
Question 1
In “Guess How Much I Love You,” What Kind Of Animal Is Little Nutbrown Hare?
Question 1
What Special Thing Makes “The Rainbow Fish” Famous?
Question 1
Which Animals Are The Family Searching For In “We’re Going On A Bear Hunt”?
Question 1
What Phrase Repeats In “Love You Forever”?
Question 1
In “The Paper Bag Princess,” What Does Elizabeth Wear To Rescue Ronald?
Question 1
What Animal Spins The Web In “The Very Busy Spider”?
Question 1
In “The BFG,” What Does BFG Stand For?
Question 1
Who Is The Brilliant Child In Roald Dahl’s “Matilda”?
Question 1
What Kind Of Creatures Are The Villains In “The Witches”?
Question 1
Who Is The Boy Wizard In “Harry Potter And The Sorcerer’s Stone”?
Question 1
Who Wrote The “Goosebumps” Series?
Question 1
What Is Ms. Frizzle’s Job In “The Magic School Bus” Books?
Question 1
What Are You Trying To Find In “Where’s Waldo? ”?
Question 1
Who Tells The Story In “The True Story Of The Three Little Pigs!”?
Question 1
What Kind Of Animals Are The Main Babies In “Owl Babies”?
Question 1
In “The Gruffalo,” What Animal Outsmarts Everyone?
Question 1
In Jan Brett’s “The Mitten,” What Clothing Item Fills Up With Animals?
Question 1
What Happens In “The Napping House”?
Question 1
In “Hatchet,” What Does Brian Have To Do After A Plane Crash?
Question 1
What Strange Place Does Stanley Yelnats Dig Holes In “Holes”?
Question 1
In “The Baby-Sitters Club,” What Do The Kids Run?
Question 1
Which Girl Is Famous For Her Funny Diary Voice In “Junie B. Jones”?
Question 1
What Do Kids Turn Into In The “Animorphs” Series?
Question 1
Who Is The Underwear-Clad Hero In “Captain Underpants”?
Question 1
What Kind Of Book Is “Scary Stories To Tell In The Dark”?
Question 1
Who Wrote “A Light In The Attic”?
Question 1
Which Book Starts The Magic Tree House Series?
Question 1
What Is Maniac Magee’s First Name?
Question 1
In “The Giver,” What Makes Jonas Different In His Community?
Question 1
“Number The Stars” Takes Place During Which War?
Question 1
What Object Lets The Boy Open The Mysterious Cupboard In “The Indian In The Cupboard”?
Question 1
In “Jumanji,” What Kind Of Game Causes The Trouble?
Question 1
In “The Twits,” What Kind Of People Are Mr. And Mrs. Twit?
Question 1
In “George’s Marvelous Medicine,” What Does George Make?
Question 1
In “Esio Trot,” What Pet Does Mr. Hoppy Use In His Plan?
Question 1
Which Author Created “Wayside School Is Falling Down”?
Question 1
In “There’s A Boy In The Girls’ Bathroom,” What Is Bradley’s Big Struggle?
Question 1
What Kind Of Animals Are Important In “Redwall”?
Question 1
In “The Wreck Of The Zephyr,” What Does The Boy Want To Do?
Question 1
“The Relatives Came” Celebrates What Kind Of Visit?
Question 1
What Animal Is Stellaluna?
Question 1
What Does Chester Raccoon Do In “The Kissing Hand”?
Question 1
What Is “The Keeping Quilt” Made From?
Question 1
In “Thunder Cake,” What Helps The Child Feel Brave?
Question 1
In “Amazing Grace,” What Does Grace Want To Do?
Question 1
Who Is Officer Buckle’s Dog Partner?
Question 1
What Item Causes Trouble In “Lilly’s Purple Plastic Purse”?
Question 1
What Kind Of Flower Is “Chrysanthemum” Named After?
Question 1
In “Owen,” What Comfort Item Won’t Owen Give Up?
Question 1
In “Julius, The Baby Of The World,” How Does Lilly Feel At First?
Question 1
What Makes Sheila Rae Brave In “Sheila Rae, The Brave”?
Question 1
Which Fairy Tale Gets Silly In “The Stinky Cheese Man”?
Question 1
After The Frog Turns Human, What Happens In “The Frog Prince Continued”?
Question 1
What Subject Seems To Invade Everything In “Math Curse”?
Question 1
“The Great Kapok Tree” Is A Story About Saving What?
Question 1
What Kind Of Animal Is “Verdi”?
Question 1
What Does Miss Rumphius Become Famous For Doing?
Question 1
What Craft Brings Family Together In “The Patchwork Quilt”?
Question 1
What Color Is The House In “The Big Orange Splot”?
Question 1
In “No, David!” What Does David Often Do?
Question 1
What Setting Does “David Goes To School” Focus On?
Question 1
What Starts The Action In “The Doorbell Rang”?
Question 1
Who Wants The Red Ripe Strawberry In This Book?
Question 1
What Unexpected Pet Shows Up In “The Day Jimmy’s Boa Ate The Wash”?
Question 1
Where Are The Five Little Monkeys Jumping?
Question 1
What Sound Does The Cricket Try To Make In “The Very Quiet Cricket”?
Question 1
What Kind Of Book Is “I Spy: Treasure Hunt”?
Question 1
What Is Cam Jansen Known For Having?
Question 1
In “The Castle In The Attic,” What Does William Find?
Question 1
In “My Teacher Is An Alien,” What Shocking Secret Is Revealed?
Question 1
In “Sarah, Plain And Tall,” Why Does Sarah Come To The Prairie?
Question 1
What Kind Of Animal Is Shiloh?
Question 1
“The Watsons Go To Birmingham—1963” Follows What Kind Of Group?
Question 1
In “Walk Two Moons,” What Is Salamanca Doing For Much Of The Story?
Question 1
“The View From Saturday” Centers On What School Activity?
Question 1
In “The Thief Of Always,” What Kind Of Place Tempts Harvey?
Question 1
What Is The First “A To Z Mysteries” Title?
Question 1
In “Vampires Don’t Wear Polka Dots,” What Are The Kids Suspecting?
Question 1
“Dear America: A Journey To The New World” Is Written As What?
Question 1
In “Meet Kirsten,” What Is Kirsten Part Of?
Question 1
Which Dummy Is The Evil One In “Night Of The Living Dummy”?
Question 1
What Subject Does “Sideways Arithmetic From Wayside School” Make Funny?
Question 1
Which Judy Blume Book Features The Character Fudge?
Question 1
What Is The Main Theme Of “Fudge-a-Mania”?
Question 1
What Does “The Bad Beginning” Begin?
Question 1
In “Frindle,” What Word Does Nick Invent For A Pen?
1
A bowl of cereal
2
A cookie
3
A donut
4
A slice of pizza
Laura Numeroff’s classic has the mouse’s chain of requests start with milk and a cookie.
1
Chris Van Allsburg
2
Eric Carle
3
Lois Lowry
4
Kevin Henkes
Chris Van Allsburg wrote and illustrated “The Polar Express,” famous for its magical Christmas Eve train ride.
1
Wishbone
2
Clifford
3
Blue
4
Spot
Eric Hill’s lift-the-flap favorite follows Spot the puppy as readers search for him around the house.
1
Build a sandcastle
2
Climb a coconut tree
3
Float down a river
4
Hide in a shoebox
Bill Martin Jr. and John Archambault’s rhyming alphabet tale centers on letters racing up a coconut tree.
1
A fox
2
A squirrel
3
A bear cub
4
A hare
Sam McBratney’s story features Little Nutbrown Hare measuring love with Big Nutbrown Hare at bedtime.
1
A talking map
2
A golden crown
3
Shimmering scales
4
A magic wand
Marcus Pfister’s book is remembered for the Rainbow Fish’s sparkling, foil-like scales he learns to share.
1
A unicorn
2
A wolf
3
A bear
4
A dragon
Michael Rosen’s rhythmic adventure follows a family pushing through obstacles because they’re going on a bear hunt.
1
“Once upon a time”
2
“Mirror, mirror”
3
“I’ll love you forever, I’ll like you for always”
4
“Fee-fi-fo-fum”
Robert Munsch’s emotional story is known for the repeated lullaby promising endless love through life’s stages.
1
A paper bag
2
A ball gown
3
A superhero cape
4
A knight’s armor
Robert Munsch flips the fairy tale by having Elizabeth outsmart a dragon while wearing a simple paper bag.
1
A caterpillar
2
A ladybug
3
A spider
4
A bee
Eric Carle’s book follows a spider who keeps working, weaving a web despite farm animals interrupting.
1
Bright Forest Guardian
2
Big Friendly Giant
3
Brave Flying Goblin
4
Best Funny Ghost
Roald Dahl’s “The BFG” stands for Big Friendly Giant, who befriends Sophie and collects dreams.
1
Sophie Hatter
2
Harriet M. Welsch
3
Matilda Wormwood
4
Lemony Snicket
“Matilda” centers on Matilda Wormwood, a book-loving genius who faces cruel adults and Miss Trunchbull.
1
Giants
2
Witches
3
Pirates
4
Vampires
Roald Dahl’s tale features real witches who secretly hate children and plot to turn them into mice.
1
Percy Jackson
2
Peter Pan
3
Harry Potter
4
Artemis Fowl
J.K. Rowling introduces Harry Potter, who learns he’s a wizard and attends Hogwarts for the first time.
1
Beverly Cleary
2
C.S. Lewis
3
E.B. White
4
R.L. Stine
R.L. Stine’s “Goosebumps” series became a 1990s phenomenon with spooky twists aimed at kids.
1
A chef
2
A teacher
3
A detective
4
A veterinarian
Ms. Frizzle is a science teacher whose class takes wild field trips in a magical transforming school bus.
1
Waldo
2
Frodo
3
Winnie
4
Stuart
Martin Handford’s puzzle books challenge readers to spot Waldo hiding in crowded, detailed scenes and illustrations.
1
A talking brick
2
The Wolf
3
The Third Pig
4
Little Red Riding Hood
Jon Scieszka retells the fairy tale from the wolf’s viewpoint, claiming it was all a misunderstanding.
1
Bats
2
Penguins
3
Owls
4
Kittens
“Owl Babies” follows three baby owls anxiously waiting for their mother to return to the nest.
1
A mouse
2
A rabbit
3
A bear
4
A hedgehog
Julia Donaldson’s story features a clever mouse inventing a “Gruffalo” to scare off predators in the woods.
1
A hat
2
A boot
3
A mitten
4
A scarf
Jan Brett’s version piles woodland animals into a lost mitten until it stretches to its limit.
1
Everyone learns to swim
2
Everyone piles up and falls asleep
3
Everyone builds a treehouse
4
Everyone goes to the moon
Audrey Wood’s circular tale stacks sleepy characters on one bed until a tiny surprise causes a huge wake-up.
1
Find buried treasure
2
Survive alone in the wilderness
3
Win a spelling bee
4
Become a famous actor
Gary Paulsen’s “Hatchet” follows Brian Robeson using a hatchet to survive alone in the Canadian wilderness.
1
A snowy mountain lodge
2
A dried-up camp in the desert
3
A city library basement
4
A floating island
Louis Sachar’s “Holes” sends Stanley to Camp Green Lake, where boys dig daily under a mysterious warden.
1
A spaceship crew
2
A lemonade factory
3
A babysitting business
4
A circus troupe
Ann M. Martin’s series follows friends who form a babysitting club, balancing jobs, school, and friendships.
1
Junie B. Jones
2
Pippi Longstocking
3
Nancy Drew
4
Anne Shirley
Barbara Park’s series features Junie B.’s hilarious, blunt narration about school, family, and everyday kid drama.
1
Ghosts
2
Animals
3
Dinosaurs
4
Robots
K.A. Applegate’s “Animorphs” follows teens who can morph into animals to fight secret alien invaders.
1
The Invisible Man
2
Waldo
3
Peter Rabbit
4
Captain Underpants
Dav Pilkey’s books feature a goofy superhero created when two boys hypnotize their grumpy principal.
1
A science textbook
2
A collection of scary folktales
3
A sports biography
4
A fairy-tale cookbook
Alvin Schwartz compiled chilling tales and urban legends, made even creepier by Stephen Gammell’s unsettling illustrations.
1
Shel Silverstein
2
Maurice Sendak
3
Judy Blume
4
Dr. Seuss
Shel Silverstein’s poetry collection mixes humor and weirdness, becoming a staple of 1980s classroom reading.
1
The Absent Author
2
Redwall
3
Dinosaurs Before Dark
4
Welcome to Dead House
Mary Pope Osborne begins the series with Jack and Annie discovering a tree house that sends them to dinosaurs.
1
Gregory
2
Timothy
3
Harold
4
Jeffrey
Jerry Spinelli’s hero is Jeffrey “Maniac” Magee, a legendary runner who changes a divided town.
1
He is invisible
2
He is chosen as the Receiver of Memory
3
He can fly
4
He never sleeps
Lois Lowry’s novel has Jonas selected to receive memories of the past, revealing painful truths about “Sameness.”
1
The Revolutionary War
2
World War II
3
The Vietnam War
4
The Civil War
Lois Lowry’s story follows Danish children helping Jewish friends during the Nazi occupation in World War II.
1
A whistle
2
A coin
3
A feather
4
A key
Lynne Reid Banks’s book hinges on a special key that brings a tiny toy figure to life.
1
A card trick deck
2
A video game console
3
A board game
4
A puzzle cube
Chris Van Allsburg’s “Jumanji” unleashes jungle chaos when kids start playing a mysterious board game.
1
Shy and quiet librarians
2
Brave and noble knights
3
Kind and generous bakers
4
Mean and disgusting pranksters
Roald Dahl’s “The Twits” stars a nasty couple who play cruel tricks until they get a fitting comeuppance.
1
A flying bicycle
2
A magic spell book
3
A new medicine for his grandma
4
A time machine
George mixes household ingredients into a “medicine” that causes wild, unexpected results for his grouchy grandmother.
1
A tortoise
2
A hamster
3
A goldfish
4
A parrot
Roald Dahl’s gentle comedy features a shy man using a tortoise trick to impress his neighbor, Mrs. Silver.
1
R.L. Stine
2
Jean Marzollo
3
Louis Sachar
4
Gary Paulsen
Louis Sachar’s Wayside stories are absurd school snapshots, set in a bizarre building with one classroom per floor.
1
Learning to breathe underwater
2
Behavior and fitting in at school
3
Becoming a movie star
4
Winning a world chess title
Louis Sachar’s novel follows troubled Bradley as a counselor helps him change how he sees himself and others.
1
Talking woodland creatures
2
Talking sea monsters
3
Talking dinosaurs
4
Talking aliens
Brian Jacques’s fantasy begins at Redwall Abbey, where brave mice and friends defend against invading villains.
1
Turn invisible
2
Fly like the wind
3
Live underwater
4
Become a king
Chris Van Allsburg’s story is framed as a tale told in a seaside town about a boy obsessed with flying.
1
A royal wedding
2
A trip to outer space
3
A school field trip
4
Family coming to stay
Cynthia Rylant’s warm picture book shows relatives arriving, crowding the house, and creating joyful family memories.
1
A bat
2
A duckling
3
A squirrel
4
A kitten
Janell Cannon’s “Stellaluna” follows a baby fruit bat raised by birds, learning she’s different but still loved.
1
Wins a race
2
Receives a kiss on his hand for comfort
3
Finds a magic ring
4
Builds a snowman
Audrey Penn’s story gives Chester a “kissing hand” so he feels his mother’s love at school.
1
Gold coins
2
Seashells
3
Tree bark
4
Family clothing scraps
Patricia Polacco’s book shows a quilt sewn from clothing, passed down to connect generations and family history.
1
Learning to juggle
2
Baking a special cake during a storm
3
Riding a dragon
4
Finding a hidden sword
Patricia Polacco tells how gathering ingredients and baking “thunder cake” turns fear into courage during storms.
1
Train a lion
2
Play Peter Pan in a school play
3
Become a pirate captain
4
Win a math contest
Mary Hoffman’s story shows Grace proving she can be Peter Pan, no matter what others assume about her.
1
Waldo
2
Gloria
3
Spot
4
Stellaluna
Peggy Rathmann’s book pairs safety officer Buckle with Gloria the dog, whose antics make presentations unforgettable.
1
A secret map
2
A talking trumpet
3
A purple plastic purse
4
A magic mirror
Kevin Henkes’s Lilly brings her prized purse to school, but an impulsive moment teaches her self-control.
1
A tulip
2
A rose
3
A daisy
4
A chrysanthemum
In Kevin Henkes’s story, Chrysanthemum loves her long name until teasing at school makes her doubt it.
1
His teddy bear
2
His toy truck
3
His baseball glove
4
His blanket
Kevin Henkes’s “Owen” centers on a boy attached to his blanket, learning a creative way to keep it.
1
Proud to be a chef
2
Happy to move away
3
Excited to be a babysitter
4
Jealous of the new baby
Kevin Henkes’s Lilly starts out resentful of baby Julius, then slowly grows into her big-sister role.
1
She becomes invisible
2
She thinks she’s fearless, then learns courage includes admitting fear
3
She never gets lost
4
She can fly over trees
Kevin Henkes shows Sheila Rae facing being lost, discovering real bravery includes asking for help.
1
Cinderella
2
Rapunzel
3
Sleeping Beauty
4
The Gingerbread Man
Jon Scieszka’s parody twists classic tales, including a smelly “Stinky Cheese Man” version of Gingerbread Man.
1
The prince vanishes forever
2
The prince becomes a wizard
3
The prince dislikes royal life and runs away
4
The prince turns into a dragon
Jon Scieszka humorously continues the fairy tale, showing the prince unhappy and longing for his frog days.
1
Astronomy
2
Math
3
Karate
4
Spelling
In “Math Curse,” a teacher’s comment makes a student see math problems in every part of daily life.
1
A mountain cave
2
A coral reef
3
A desert cactus
4
A rainforest tree
Lynne Cherry’s book has rainforest animals plead with a logger, urging him not to cut a kapok tree.
1
A rabbit
2
A horse
3
A snake
4
A whale
Janell Cannon’s “Verdi” follows a young snake who resists turning dull and ordinary like the adult snakes.
1
Planting lupines everywhere
2
Catching treasure thieves
3
Inventing robots
4
Building giant castles
Barbara Cooney’s “Miss Rumphius” fulfills a promise to make the world more beautiful by spreading lupine flowers.
1
Carving statues
2
Making a quilt
3
Painting murals
4
Building kites
Valerie Flournoy’s story shows a child learning the meaning of family history while helping create a patchwork quilt.
1
Orange
2
Purple
3
Green
4
Gray
Daniel Pinkwater’s character paints his house wildly, inspiring the neighborhood to celebrate creativity and individuality.
1
Teaches science
2
Solves mysteries
3
Gets into trouble
4
Saves a kingdom
David Shannon’s simple, funny book shows David breaking rules, with a loving reminder that he’s still cared for.
1
A pirate ship
2
School
3
A space station
4
A jungle temple
David Shannon takes his troublemaking character to school, where David keeps hearing “No, David!” all day.
1
A magic carpet arrives
2
Someone rings the doorbell as cookies are being shared
3
A spaceship lands outside
4
A tornado hits the house
Pat Hutchins’s math-friendly story uses cookies and repeated visitors to show sharing and simple division.
1
A sleepy owl
2
The Big Hungry Bear
3
A friendly unicorn
4
A baby dragon
Don and Audrey Wood’s story has a little mouse trying to hide a strawberry from the Big Hungry Bear.
1
A parakeet
2
A pony
3
A goldfish
4
A boa constrictor
Trinka Hakes Noble’s hilarious tale recounts a chaotic field trip where Jimmy’s boa causes a laundry disaster.
1
In the backyard
2
In the bathtub
3
On the roof
4
On the bed
Eileen Christelow’s rhyme shows five monkeys bouncing on a bed until bumps and a doctor’s warning stop them.
1
A chirp
2
A bark
3
A whistle
4
A roar
Eric Carle’s cricket meets many insects but can’t chirp until he finally finds another cricket.
1
A dictionary
2
A chapter mystery novel
3
A cookbook
4
A hidden-object search book
Jean Marzollo and photographer Walter Wick created “I Spy” books where readers hunt for objects in detailed photos.
1
A magic flute
2
A pet dragon
3
Super strength
4
A photographic memory
David A. Adler’s Cam Jansen solves kid-friendly mysteries using her “camera” memory to remember exact details.
1
A buried pirate ship
2
A talking refrigerator
3
A tiny castle that becomes a real adventure
4
A secret basketball court
Elizabeth Winthrop’s story begins when a boy receives a miniature castle that pulls him into a dangerous quest.
1
The town is a movie set
2
The school is underwater
3
The class is dreaming
4
The teacher is an alien
Bruce Coville’s sci-fi adventure follows kids who suspect their teacher is not human—and they’re right.
1
To join a circus
2
To run for mayor
3
To possibly become a wife and mother in a new family
4
To open a candy shop
Patricia MacLachlan’s novel tells of Sarah answering an advertisement, bringing hope and uncertainty to a prairie home.
1
A cat
2
A dog
3
A horse
4
A rabbit
Phyllis Reynolds Naylor’s story features a boy who secretly shelters Shiloh, a beagle, from an abusive owner.
1
A class on a cruise
2
A band on tour
3
A family on a road trip
4
A team of astronauts
Christopher Paul Curtis blends humor and history as the Watson family travels to Birmingham during a pivotal era.
1
Traveling on a road trip while telling stories
2
Building a robot army
3
Training for the Olympics
4
Exploring an underwater city
Sharon Creech’s novel alternates a road trip with Sal’s storytelling as she searches for truth about her mother.
1
A baking contest
2
A haunted house tour
3
A surfing championship
4
An academic team competition
E.L. Konigsburg’s book follows a teacher and four students as their academic team forms in unexpected ways.
1
A mysterious holiday house
2
A secret zoo
3
A desert castle
4
A floating carnival
Clive Barker’s dark fantasy lures a lonely boy into a magical house where every day feels like a holiday.
1
The Daring Detective
2
The Broken Bookmark
3
The Absent Author
4
The Crooked Castle
Ron Roy’s series starts with “The Absent Author,” where kid detectives search for a missing writer.
1
Their town is shrinking
2
Their dog is a robot
3
Their teacher is a vampire
4
Their school is on Mars
Debbie Dadey and Marcia Thornton Jones kick off Bailey School Kids with a silly mystery about a “vampire” teacher.
1
A comic strip
2
A recipe collection
3
A newspaper article
4
A girl’s diary
The Dear America books use diary-style storytelling, and this one follows a girl sailing to early America.
1
The American Girl series
2
The Animorphs series
3
The Redwall series
4
The Goosebumps series
“Meet Kirsten” introduces Kirsten Larson as an American Girl character, telling her immigrant childhood story.
1
Mr. Wood
2
Rocky
3
Dennis
4
Slappy
In the original Goosebumps book, the sinister dummy is Mr. Wood, while Rocky is the friendly one.
1
Astronomy
2
Cooking
3
Math
4
Music
Louis Sachar turns arithmetic into absurd jokes and riddles, using Wayside’s strange logic to teach laughter with numbers.
1
Matilda
2
Hatchet
3
Superfudge
4
Redwall
In “Superfudge,” Judy Blume continues the Hatcher family stories, with little Fudge causing chaos for Peter.
1
Family vacation chaos involving Fudge
2
A secret animal war
3
A magical train ride
4
A ghost haunting a school
Judy Blume’s “Fudge-a-Mania” throws the Hatchers into a disastrous vacation where Fudge’s antics drive everyone crazy.
1
A Series of Unfortunate Events
2
The I Spy collection
3
The Baby-Sitters Club
4
The Magic Tree House
Lemony Snicket opens the Baudelaire orphans’ saga with tragedy and the arrival of the scheming Count Olaf.
1
Pindle
2
Frindle
3
Wizzle
4
Doodle
Andrew Clements’s “Frindle” shows how a kid-made word spreads nationwide, proving language can change fast.
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Before screens took over, these stories lived on bedtime shelves and in classroom corners. Some made you laugh, some made you daydream, and a few kept you up past lights-out. Do you remember these iconic childhood books, or have the titles faded?
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