Pippi Longstocking

Written by the Swedish author Astrid Lindgren, the first Pippi Longstocking book was initially turned down in 1944 in one of those ‘worst decisions’ moments by an eminent Stockholm publisher. Since that time Pippi has been featured in eleven books translated into sixty four languages, television shows inGermanyand theUSand – remarkably – both US and Soviet-made movies.

Pippi is nine, immensely strong, and has a wonderful time making adults appear stupid.

“When she’s not dancing with the burglars who were just trying to rob her house, she’s attempting to learn the “pluttification” tables at school; fighting Adolf, the strongest man in the world at the circus; or playing tag with police officers. Pippi’s high-spirited, good-natured hijinks cause as much trouble as fun, but a more generous child you won’t find anywhere.”

Amazon offers a paperback edition in the Puffin Modern Classics series.

The Nancy Drew Mysteries

Collected in the late sixties and early seventies, these stories of a smart, resourceful girl detective who not only didn’t need to be rescued, but often came to help her hapless boyfriend. “Attractive, titian-haired”Nancyis older than her audience (that’s a general rule – kids like to read about someone a bit older than themselves, never younger) and drives a convertible.

First appearing in 1930, fifty-six Nancy Drew novels were produced, written by several writers under the pen-name of Carolyn Keene.

Kim

Rudyard Kipling’s Kim is a boy-and-old-man tale of loyalty and courage set inIndia during the British Raj. Kim is an orphan boy, assumed to be Indian but actually the son of an Irish soldier, who runs through city streets working as a messenger for the secret service. That’s right – a boy secret agent! But between stealing documents from Russian agents, Kim accompanies a wise old Tibetan lama along the Grand Trunk Road, learning wisdom and spiritual truth from the elderly monk. A classic that retains all its excitement!

Audiobooks Now has a copy you can listen to.

Old School Adventure Stories for Young Readers

Dangerous Book for Boys
This week we’ll look at children’s books in the classic style, where adventurous youngsters take on the world in a healthy, outdoorsy, risk-of something-terrible-happening sort of way. These aren’t the Beatrix Potter type of story, where apparently naughty children who disobey their wise parents run into trouble and have to be rescued. No, these are kids who are very much in charge of their own destiny. Adults are often at the edge of the picture, either oblivious to what’s going on, or – quite often – the cause of all the peril. At best, adults are needed to do things that kids can’t do themselves, like drive cars or arrest villains.

After all, the most popular children’s books of our lifetime feature deliberately old-fashioned elements; Harry Potter goes to a boarding school, plays team sports, and fights an evil that most of the world is completely unaware of. Kids love danger – that’s why Conn and Hal Iggulden’s Dangerous Book For Boys was so successful. They love the sense of excitement that comes from challenging themselves, and pushing beyond the PlayStation culture. Encouraging them to read stories with these elements stimulates their imagination and gets them thinking about doing more active, adventurous things.

I decided to ask a broad selection of people – mostly writers and librarians, but all sorts of book-loving folk – for their nominations. Quite a lot of great books were suggested that don’t quite meet the criteria, either because they featured non-humans as their protagonists (is Paddington a hero? How about Curious George?). Others – like the sci-fi classic “Ender’s Game” aren’t really old school enough.

Stay with us this week for a mixture of old-school classics and some newer titles.

Sporting Books

Play Their Hearts Out bookSports books have been this week’ s theme. We began with a look at why sports books have a potency beyond mere athleticism with The Sports Illustrated list of 100 best sports books and we recommended the audiobook version of “The Boys of Summer”, available at AudioBooksNow.

We looked at ways of learning or improving your own game, whether it’s golf, tennis or Bocce.

Most popular sports books are biographies and memoirs, so we came up with recommendations for the very best.

Goodreads gave us lists of favorite sports fiction voted on by members and books on women in sports. Joe Layden’s Women in Sports: The Complete Book on the World’s Greatest Female Athletes came out as a clear recommendation.

Lastly we looked at sport in a wider context, and came up with something quite unusual – Final Whistle, Stephen Cooper’s elegy to members of a London rugby club who volunteered to serve in the First World War, and did not return.

And don’t forget to check out our collections of sports audiobooks, including special sections on baseball and golf!

Sport and the Rest of the World

This is what academic types like to call “Sport and Society”. It’s that part where the activities of athletes connects with real life, and makes their skills more than just “Good at running around with a ball.”

My recommendation here is a little out of the mainstream. The Final Whistle is a book about rugby, which is certainly not an everyday sport in North America. But, really, it’s not. It’s about fifteen players from the Roslyn Park club in London, who served and died in the First World War. Nominated for the Times Sports Book of the Year.

“This is the story of fifteen men killed in the Great War. All played rugby for one London club; none lived to hear the final whistle. Rugby brought them together; rugby led the rush to war. —- together their stories paint a portrait in miniature of the entire war. An old press cutting gave numbers – 350 served, 72 died – but no names. So began a quest to rediscover these men and capture their lives, from their vanished Edwardian youth and vigour, to the war they fought and how they died.’

‘Haunting and beautiful . . . this tells the story of men from one rugby club but it is a universal narrative of heroism and loss. He writes superbly and has produced a book of commendable scholarship. I cannot recommend it enough.’ Fergal Keane”

Women’s Sports

The growth of women’s sports hasn’t – yet – been matched by a real growth in the number of sports books by, about and for women.

Here’s Joe Layden’s “Women in Sports: The Complete Book on the World’s Greatest Female Athletes”. And once again we go to Goodreads for a list of  ‘Women in sports’ books.

I’ll quote from one piece from one book, “Nike is a Goddess.”

“…from Gertrude Ederle’s historic swim across the English Channel to Billie Jean King’s victory over Bobby Riggs in the Battle of the Sexes, Nike Is a Goddess tells the inspiring stories of women opening up an arena that had been closed to them. Nike Is a Goddess pays tribute to the athletes who led the way and serves as inspiration to those who will come after.”

Classic Sports Fiction

Some of the best sports writing is fiction, in novels or short stories. A hundred years ago the Chicago columnist Ring Lardner was lionized as not merely the best sportswriter, but one of the very best writers of his time. P.G Wodehouse – possibly the funniest man ever to bang away on a typewriter – wrote short stories about golf that a non-golfer like myself can enjoy.

The Goodreads site, a gathering of regular folks who like to read, has a list of favorite sports fiction voted on by members. It’s a real mix, from John Grisham’s novel about a football failure to a Middle-Grade book about a young Latina girl who is picked as a goalkeeper. There should be something for everyone there!

Sports Celebrities “In Their Own Words”

Part of being a rich and famous athlete or coach is that you get to write your autobiography. It’s understood that a professional writer may be involved in helping the celebrity put the thing into book form.

But being good at what you do doesn’t mean you have a great story to tell. And sometimes your story is best left in the hands of someone else. Here’s a list of nine sports biographies that make the cut.

This covers a mix of American sports, with more on baseball than any other. But we have ‘Seabiscuit’ and a biography of Muhammad Ali, the autobiography of Arthur Ashe and more.

How To Play

What are you, a couch potato? Let’s start the week by seeking out some audiobooks about actually playing a sport. Of course, merely listening to the book doesn’t actually work any muscle groups or teach you valuable skills, but it puts you in the mood to play a sport.

Let’s assume that you aren’t looking for a book to learn a team sport. Most of us learn those at an early age, from coaches, parents and other kids. If you think that the best starting place is a book, you’re probably already an adult.

Want to play golf? Here’s what people who already play – or, at least, are PGA Facebook fans – recommend: the nine best golf books ever. And check out our golf collection too.

How about tennis? (I’ve avoided Venus and Serena Williams’ ‘How to Play Tennis’ in the grounds that you’ll just have sand kicked in your self esteem)

And something less active? The Joy of Bocce. Don’t worry if you haven’t heard of Bocce. You’ll know it when you see it!