- Ben & Me, Robert Lawson
- Time Cat, Lloyd Alexander
- Huguenot Garden, Douglas Jones
- Ink on His Fingers, Louise Vernon
- Captive Treasure, Milly Howard
- Sarah, Plain & Tall, Patricia MacLachlan
- Sir Gibbie, George MacDonald
- The Invention of Hugo Cabret, by Brian Selznick - the illustrations make this book a unique experience
- Little House in the Big Woods and all its sequels, Laura Ingalls Wilder (probably single-handedly responsible for my love for "the frontier")
- Life in the Great Ice Age, Michael J. Oard
- The Sign of the Beaver, Elizabeth George Speare
- Around the World in Eighty Days, Jules Verne
- Anything by Scott O'Dell; my favorite was The Hawk that Dare Not Hunt By Day
- A Gathering of Days, Joan W. Blos
- The Midwife's Apprentice, Karen Cushman
- The Christian Heritage Series, Nancy Rue (I read "The Salem Years" titles, because they were what I had, but I'm sure the following Williamsburg and Chicago sets are just as good).
- North to Freedom or I Am David, Anne Holm
- Kidnapped and Treasure Island, Robert Louis Stevenson
- Robinson Crusoe, Daniel Defoe (yes, it's a loose definition of "historical fiction")
- Across Five Aprils, Irene Hunt
- Rifles for Watie, Harold Keith
- Hans Brinker or The Silver Skates, Mary Mapes Dodge
- The Count of Monte Cristo (my favorite book as a 5th grader), Alexandre Dumas, pere
- The Bronze Bow, Elizabeth George Speare (helped me to love Jesus as never before)
- Little Women and Little Men, Louisa May Alcott
- Ivanhoe, Sir Walter Scott
- The Witch of Blackbird Pond, Elizabeth George Speare- Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry, Mildred D. Taylor
- The Slave Dancer, Paula Fox
- I've heard that the G. A. Henty books are really well-loved, especially by boys, but I've never tried them.
- Queen of the Reformation, Charles Ludwig
- The Hiding Place, Corrie Ten Boom (not fiction)
- Mimosa, Amy Carmichael (not fiction)
- Missions & the Millers (short missionary biographies)
One of my favorite things about the "classical method" of teaching is that it roots everything in the flow of history. So a literature unit will often revolve around books set in the time period or place which the student is studying in history or geography. That's when historical fiction comes in SO handy, biographies, too! (Of course other genres are brought in easily, tied in by their thematic elements. And kids are encouraged to read on their own for fun, without being told to do it!)
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