![]() ![]() The movie is awesome and deals with many of the same themes that The Forgotten Door does. It was nearly a hundred pages long with illustrations and everything.Īlexander Key also created the source from which Disney made their movie Return to Witch Mountain - which, despite it’s name, is not a sequel. The fascinating things was that, printed in the pages or one of those reading books (though not the other, even though they were identical in every other way), was the entire text of Alexander Key’s The Forgotten Door. Milne about the Knight Whose Armor Didn’t Squeak and I love that poem still. I took two of the same book home to share with my brothers. ![]() I’m pretty sure I was the only one who took some home. Our school was giving away old reading books to anybody who wanted them. Neither of them were being used, probably because they had something good in them. ![]() I remember clearly two distinct pieces of literature that I found in reading books. I was that nerdy kid who took the book home and read it cover to cover in the first few weeks of school and then thought it was boring the rest of the year when the teacher assigned us to read things from it.Įxcept for two things. The reading books were stuffed full of poems - mostly boring - and stories and snippets of books that were intended to broaden our horizons. Does anybody remember the old reading books they used to pass out in elementary school? It was a big, fat, textbook sized chunk of awesomeness that the teachers handed out every year, along with math and language books. ![]()
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