Several years ago I started reading these books for each of my children’s current age. With my daughter’s birthday last month, it was the perfect time to read Your Eight-Year-Old: Lively and Outgoing by Louise Bates Ames and Carol Chase Haber.
Interestingly, since this is one of the more recently published (1989 compared to many in the 70s), it felt the most outdated. There’s so much discussion about the differences between boys and girls or learning disabilities that felt a little uncomfortable reading now. Even a letter from a mother discussing how her husband is forcing their daughter to use her right hand for writing, even repeating homework already done with the left.
There are also some aspects where it feels like we’ve gone backwards, where it talks about an 8-year-old being able to take a bus or navigate through the city on their own. It’s definitely a bit of a different world now.
I was amused at one point when Cabbage Patch dolls were mentioned and how they’ve even becoming more popular than Barbie and Ken. Or when favorite tv shows mentioned include Thundercats, Muppet Babies, and Wuzzles. There is a list of books for 8-year-olds in the back, so many of which are still popular and others I’m intrigued about.
If you’re reading these all like I’ve been, there’s no reason not to read this one as well. But if you’re curious about what these books are like, trying to understand a bit more of child development, I probably wouldn’t start with year eight.
3.5/5