With millions of titles, ThriftBooks has an endless selection of children’s books at the best prices to fill your child’s imagination…. and their library. From childhood classics to new undiscovered worlds of adventures, there is something for everyone and every budget. And with the ThriftBooks ReadingRewards program, every purchase gets you a step closer to your next free book. Shop ThriftBooks.com today to unleash the pure imagination a world of children’s books has to offer. ThriftBooks.com. Read more. Spend less. I don’t want to rehash an argument about why diverse children’s books matter and why problematic things are problematic when so much great writing about that already exists on this site alone, as well as the wider internet. Happy memories of reading books can remain happy memories, but we should also strive not to perpetuate errors, erasures, and aggressions in classrooms, libraries, and homes. When I teach children’s literature to undergraduate education majors, I consider it an essential part of the course to discuss the classics they may remember. What I’m here to do today is give you some text sets (teacher-speak for, well, sets of texts with a unifying theme or purpose) that contextualize, challenge, or correct some of the children’s literature classics that adults find themselves very reluctant to give up. In class, I call it my “classics and clapbacks” unit. What classics have you replaced or supplemented with clapbacks?