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Andrew Flattery's avatar

My younger boys enjoy this beautifully illustrated and faithful version of St George and the Dragon-

https://substack.com/@andyflattery/note/c-70498628?utm_source=notes-share-action&r=a9rcm

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Back Porch Writer's avatar

Fascinating. Thanks for sharing your experiences, Chris. I remember reading Dr. Seuss back in the 60s as a 4-year-old and going from there to any kid's book with a whiff of masculinity in the waiting room. *Mike Mulligan and his Steam Shovel* was a favorite of mine.

However, I always enjoyed reading history, science, and technology books more than fiction as a kid. The "How and Why Wonder Books;" technical references of dinosaurs, airplanes, race cars, ships, dirigibles, etc.; and the Osprey Men-at-Arms series of books, showing the uniforms and weapons of soldiers from history. Those books had quite enough wonder, horror, and adventure for me. An occasional Hardy Boys book was fine, but I loved the World Book Encyclopedia for fun reading more than the new kids' fiction books that were crowding out the masculine stories in the 70s.

It wasn't until I saw a copy of *Starship Troopers* sitting one shelf over from a reference book about Medal of Honor recipients that I realized that there were still masculine tales available for me. I still have a copy of Heinlein's "Between Planets." These tales led me to the "Yankee Flier" series of air combat and combating espionage tales. Then CS Forester's Hornblower series; I just read his "Rifleman Dodd" tale last year, so his influence in my reading remains.

I think that looking at my reading experience, I preferred reading about grown ups doing great things, and Heinlein's stories showed kids coming pretty darn close in their own accomplishments.

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