Ah, very cool. I've heard of Magic Treehouse, might have read a book or two. Oof. Good luck on that final. Indeed!
Honestly, I've never liked the Magic Treehouse series, since I was little. I think I'd like it less now, being older. *Braces for a withering storm of rebuke*
That's alright. I was never a good reader to begin with, so even if I did read Magic Treehouse, I don't really remember what happened.
Ah, I see. That's still a lot of books. I barely even finished five in a year back when I was younger. Hmm, that could be a problem. With me and my engineering classes, I'm good friends with most of the students and most of the time we all struggle with the same thing as a class, so hopefully you aren't the only one.
The books are tiny, though. I actually thought that there were more in the series (like with the Boxcar Children, a series I used to love, although the 19 original ones by Gertrude Chandler Warner were the best. Now there are over 160 books in the series.)
True. Although it can take me a while to finish a small book. (Wow. That's a lot of books. I've never read anything that long before. )
Ah, I see. That's still a lot of books. I barely even finished five in a year back when I was younger. Hmm, that could be a problem. With me and my engineering classes, I'm good friends with most of the students and most of the time we all struggle with the same thing as a class, so hopefully you aren't the only one.
Yeah, not as many as the Babysitter's Club though. xD That series has over 120. That's the problem with online classes... you can't just ask the student next to you if they know where the info is. I probably should use the course support forum.
Ah, I see. Still a lot of books. I will always be amazed at how long a story can go. Ah, that makes sense, but yeah, you should use that course support forum. Our online classes have those and the TAs are really good at responding.
Honestly, I've never liked the Magic Treehouse series, since I was little. I think I'd like it less now, being older. *Braces for a withering storm of rebuke*
Ngl, I did not like them either. I liked the first few and then it got boring...
Oh, phew, thanks! Quite a few of my friends say "How DARE you, Magic Treehouse was my LYFE" and I felt kind of bad for the lyves they lived.
The books are tiny, though. I actually thought that there were more in the series (like with the Boxcar Children, a series I used to love, although the 19 original ones by Gertrude Chandler Warner were the best. Now there are over 160 books in the series.)
Yeah they are pretty small. Also the Babysitter's Club... there are so many of those (like the Boxcar Children) They just pop out a bunch of those little books for kids to read.
They were a fast read like ten years ago, so I can't imagine how fast I could read them now. I've actually never read any of the Babysitter's Club (and I probably won't start now that I'm a bit older ) but I think it's kind of unfortunate how the first writer wrote the first 35 (like Gertrude Chandler Warner's first 19) and then ghostwriters just take the same stuff and write it again. The later ones in the Boxcar Children series aren't bad, but they just don't have the same quality as the first ones. (I actually liked the very first one the best.)
What I think is funny is that the author of the first books in the Babysitter's Club just decided to hand over the series to ghostwriters and is still writing other books, and not continuing her own series. The sad thing about Gertrude Chandler Warner is she was writing the books in her retirement (usually when she was sick, actually) and after she passed others started writing more of them in her name.
Honestly, I've never liked the Magic Treehouse series, since I was little. I think I'd like it less now, being older. *Braces for a withering storm of rebuke*
That's alright. I was never a good reader to begin with, so even if I did read Magic Treehouse, I don't really remember what happened.
I read a ton (and a lot more when I had less school ) but I never enjoyed reading Magic Treehouse. Maybe it was the evolution part and all the boring repetition?
The books are tiny, though. I actually thought that there were more in the series (like with the Boxcar Children, a series I used to love, although the 19 original ones by Gertrude Chandler Warner were the best. Now there are over 160 books in the series.)
True. Although it can take me a while to finish a small book. (Wow. That's a lot of books. I've never read anything that long before. )
Well, if you're busy that makes sense. However, these shouldn't take especially long. The books are generally between 65 and 75 pages long. The Boxcar Children books are quite a bit longer, ranging from 128 to 192 pages, I do believe. (Oh, I've not even come close to reading all the books in the series, but I think I've read maybe 60 or 70. )
Yeah, not as many as the Babysitter's Club though. xD That series has over 120. That's the problem with online classes... you can't just ask the student next to you if they know where the info is. I probably should use the course support forum.
Ah, I see. Still a lot of books. I will always be amazed at how long a story can go. Ah, that makes sense, but yeah, you should use that course support forum. Our online classes have those and the TAs are really good at responding.
Yeah the main reason they go that far is because they don't have any continuity at all xD They repeat plot lines a lot. The problem with our course support forum is that the professor usually does not reply. It's meant for other students to help a student, and usually students don't feel like checking the forum.
Yeah they are pretty small. Also the Babysitter's Club... there are so many of those (like the Boxcar Children) They just pop out a bunch of those little books for kids to read.
They were a fast read like ten years ago, so I can't imagine how fast I could read them now. I've actually never read any of the Babysitter's Club (and I probably won't start now that I'm a bit older ) but I think it's kind of unfortunate how the first writer wrote the first 35 (like Gertrude Chandler Warner's first 19) and then ghostwriters just take the same stuff and write it again. The later ones in the Boxcar Children series aren't bad, but they just don't have the same quality as the first ones. (I actually liked the very first one the best.)
What I think is funny is that the author of the first books in the Babysitter's Club just decided to hand over the series to ghostwriters and is still writing other books, and not continuing her own series. The sad thing about Gertrude Chandler Warner is she was writing the books in her retirement (usually when she was sick, actually) and after she passed others started writing more of them in her name.
Yeah the Babysitter's club just kinda blew up. And then they had awesome repeating plot lines. But yeah, that was probably more for a cash grab on her end, while Gertrude Chandler wasn't gonna get anything except for a great legacy.