A Mother's List of Books for Children, by 
 
Gertrude Weld Arnold This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with 
almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the 
terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at 
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Title: A Mother's List of Books for Children 
Author: Gertrude Weld Arnold 
Release Date: September 1, 2006 [EBook #19157] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A MOTHER'S LIST OF 
BOOKS FOR *** 
 
Produced by Christine P. Travers, Suzanne Shell and the Online Distributed Proofreading 
Team at http://www.pgdp.net 
 
[Transcriber's note: The name Zitkala-Sa is written with two dots on the S] 
 
A MOTHER'S LIST OF BOOKS 
FOR CHILDREN 
 
Non minima pars eruditionis est bonos nosse libros 
Inscription over the doorway of Bishop Cosin's Library, Durham, England 
 
A MOTHER'S LIST
OF 
BOOKS FOR CHILDREN 
 
COMPILED BY 
GERTRUDE WELD ARNOLD 
 
CHICAGO A.C. McCLURG & CO. 1909 
Copyright A.C. McCLURG & CO. 1909 
Entered at Stationer's Hall, London, England 
All rights reserved 
Published October 9, 1909 
The University Press, Cambridge, U.S.A. 
 
TO 
MY LITTLE COUSINS 
RUTH AND ESTHER 
 
PREFACE (p. ix) 
This little book, a revision of one privately printed a few years ago, has been prepared for 
home use, and for this reason the classification has been made according to the age, and 
not the school grade, of the child. But as children differ so greatly in capacity, it should 
be understood that in this respect the arrangement is only approximate. The endeavor has 
been made to choose those fairy tales which are most free from horrible happenings, and 
to omit all writings which tolerate unkindness to animals. Humorous books are 
designated by a star and the few sad ones by a circle. 
The prices given are the same as those in the publishers' catalogues; booksellers' prices 
are often less. 
My thanks are extended to those publishers who have time and again courteously 
provided the facilities for the examination of their publications. 
Miss Annie Carroll Moore, of the New York Public Library, was kind enough to read for
me the notes and comments. I wish most gratefully to acknowledge the generous 
assistance given me by Miss Hewins, of (p. x) the Hartford Public Library, Miss Hunt, of 
the Brooklyn Public Library, and Miss Jordan, of the Boston Public Library, who 
examined the List, and suggested some changes and a few additions. Their approbation is 
elsewhere expressed. GERTRUDE WELD ARNOLD. NUTLEY, NEW JERSEY. 
 
A MOTHER'S LIST (p. xi) 
It is said, in that earliest collection of English proverbs which was made by John 
Heywood, more than three hundred years ago, that "Children must learn to creep before 
they can go." This little book for which I am asked to write a brief preface is, so far as I 
can find out, the first consistent effort yet made towards teaching children to read on John 
Heywood's principle. It is safe to say that it is destined to carry light and joy into 
multitudes of households. It is based upon methods such as I vaguely sighed after, nearly 
fifty years ago, when I was writing in the North American Review for January, 1866, a 
paper entitled Children's Books of the Year. The essay was written by request of 
Professor Charles Eliot Norton, then the editor of that periodical, and I can now see how 
immensely I should have been relieved by a book just like this Mother's List, a device 
such as nobody in that day had the wisdom and faithful industry to put together. 
In glancing over the books discussed in that early paper of mine, it is curious to see how 
the very titles of some of the most prominent have now disappeared from sight. Where 
are the Little Prudy books (p. xii) which once headed the list? Where are the stories of 
Oliver Optic? Where is Jacob Abbott's John Gay; or Work for Boys? Even Paul and 
Virginia have vanished, taking with them the philosophic Rasselas and even the pretty 
story of Undine. Nothing of that list of thirty titles is now well remembered except 
Cooper's Leatherstocking and Jane Andrews's Seven Little Sisters Who Live on the 
Round Ball That Floats in the Air, a book which has been translated into the languages of 
remote nations of the globe, I myself having seen the Chinese and Japanese versions. 
Thus irregular is the award of time and we must accept it. Meanwhile this new book is 
organized on a better plan than any dreamed of at that former period, the books being 
arranged not merely by classes alone, but according to the age of the proposed readers 
and stretching in regular order from    
    
		
	
	
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