In 6th grade my teacher realized we unruly preteens would benefit from being read to after lunch.
I can't imagine what possessed my Grade 5 teacher to think that
Ivanhoe was a good choice to read to us. I wasn't particularly engaged in the story, and when the book came up many years later on the reading list of one of my college English courses, I tried to read it... and gave up. It's
that boring, even though I do generally enjoy Middle Ages/chivalry stuff.
The librarian made a better choice. She read us a book in the Alfred Hitchcock and the Three Investigators mystery series...
The Mystery of the Talking Skull. After she finished it, I decided I wanted to read it for myself. That led to reading every book in the series that school library had. I found more in other libraries, and finally when Christmas/birthdays rolled around, I asked for books in that series.
Today, I have the whole series that was published in English. It's a collection of mismatched editions - three were published in the U.K., half are the original American hard covers, and the rest are the later American paperback editions. Fast-forward many years, and I found out from the Yahoo! group dedicated to this series that there are dozens
more that were published in Germany.
In German.
Which I don't read.
Last year one of the group members wrote a fan novel and posted a chapter a week. It had a decent old-school feel to it, other than the kids using cell phones, and I recall anticipating each Thursday evening when the latest chapter would be posted.