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These 10 kids’ books hit harder as an adult (here’s why)

TOI Lifestyle Desk
| ETimes.in | Last updated on - Aug 2, 2025, 11:41 IST
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1/12

In times of confusion, these books give clarity


Remember that magical feeling of getting lost in a children’s book as a kid? As adults, revisiting those same pages can feel like opening a time capsule and discovering layers of wisdom and emotion that you couldn’t access before.

There’s a reason these stories endure. In times of confusion, they offer clarity. When the world feels absurd or overwhelming, they provide solace. Children's literature helps adults stay humble, empathetic, and grounded by grappling with life’s mess in simple, yet meaningful ways. Here are ten incredible books that many adults find profoundly moving, sometimes even life‑changing. Each one carries themes and truths that hit differently once you’ve lived longer and felt more deeply.

2/12

The Little Prince by Antoine de Saint‑Exupéry


This book feels like an allegory in disguise. On the surface, it’s a charming tale of a little prince exploring planets—but underneath lies a meditation on love, loneliness, and seeing what's essential through the heart. Adults often return to this story again and again, discovering fresh layers of meaning each time.

3/12

The Secret Garden by Frances Hodgson Burnett


A story of growth, healing, and the transformative power of connection with nature, The Secret Garden continues to resonate long after childhood. As adults, readers appreciate how it captures emotional renewal and resilience, even in the darkest times.

4/12

The Velveteen Rabbit by Margery Williams



Few kids’ books explore authenticity and the nature of love like The Velveteen Rabbit. The idea that you become “real” through being deeply loved hits hard when you’ve experienced loss, relationships, or transformation. It’s unexpectedly lyrical and powerful for grown-ups.

5/12

Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll


A whimsical trip down the rabbit hole, Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland can read like a surreal satire of society, logic, and identity. As adults, we start to notice its playful yet pointed commentary on absurdity, power, and the rigidity of rules and somehow find permission to embrace curiosity again.

6/12

Winnie‑the‑Pooh by A.A. Milne


Simple friendships, quiet wisdom, and little joys define Winnie‑the‑Pooh. It’s a lovely reminder that the smallest delights like honey or a calm afternoon truly matter. For adults swamped by deadlines and endless to-dos, Pooh’s gentle worldview is both grounding and heartwarming.

7/12

Matilda by Roald Dahl


Smart, fierce, and often magical, Matilda becomes a beacon for adults confronting injustice or institutions that crush individuality. Dahl’s sharp wit and delight in kindness, defiance, and brilliance feels especially potent once you recognize the power differential between authority and empathy.

8/12

Charlotte’s Web by E.B. White


A story of friendship, loyalty, and the cycles of life, Charlotte’s Web strikes differently once you’ve loved and lost. It reminds adult readers how connection no matter how unlikely or fragile can leave a profound impact. Snowy farm days and the spinning of webs suddenly carry sweet gravity.

9/12

The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe by C.S. Lewis


From talking lions to moral redemption, the first Narnia book layers adventure with meaning. Adults can read it as fantasy, but also as allegory grappling with sacrifice and redemption, innocence confronting darkness, and the liberating power of belief beyond the ordinary.

10/12

Where the Wild Things Are by Maurice Sendak


More than just a story of a wild imagination, Where the Wild Things Are captures the ups and downs of childhood emotions and how the comfort of home always matters. For adults, it resonates with that bittersweet realization: the wild daydreams matter, but the safety of love and belonging is everything.

11/12

The Giving Tree by Shel Silverstein


Tender, provocative, and hard to forget, The Giving Tree invites complex questions about love, sacrifice, and giving until it hurts. As an adult, its sparse text and simple drawings cut straight to the bone, asking us to contemplate boundaries, unconditional love, and regret.
Image: shelsilverstein.com

12/12

Making these books your own again


So how do you dive back into these books as an adult?

Maybe start a weekend ritual: pick one to read and see what shifts. Even reading them aloud can bring new meaning. Share them with your partner or friends and swap reflections you might be surprised at how insights become personal.

You might cry at lines that once made you giggle or laugh at moments you didn’t notice before. These stories offer something richer now: emotional clarity, comfort, and perhaps even wisdom.

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Copyright © Jun 3, 2026, 07.39AM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service