Peter Pan, Hans Christian Andersen's fairy tales, Alice in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass. Enid Blyton's boarding school stories, Mallory Towers and St Claire's. Her adventures, Five and Seven, together with a mystery series featuring a stereotypical bumbling police constable.
I still adore Richmal Crompton's wonderful books about William Briwn and his long suffering family! Malcolm Saville's Lone Pine series, set in Shropshire I think with endpaper maps. Biggles and Worralls (his Waaf counterpart, less gripping books), Little Women and the three later books about the March family (I think Jo's Boys and Little Men, for me, tailed off a bit). The Chalet Girls, I read a lot but maybe not the first one as I was never quite sure who all these interwoven people were!
I found the full version of Robinson Crusoe at my grandmother's and determinedly ploughed through it. Another relative had two hefty leather bound volumes of Fairy tales by the Brothers Grimm, grim they were! An equally gory and unforgettable collection of the Arabian Nights' Tales. A great great aunt had some extremely moral Victorian tales of the awful fates of disobedient children!
Pamela Brown's theatre books, The Swish of the Curtain and Blue Door Venture. Loads of pony stories by the Pullein-Thompsons.
Last night I went to read a bedtime story to DGS who is 5. To my surprise he wanted to read to me! He'd chosen a Jacqueline Wilson book from his sister's shelf. It is what is now called a 'chapter book' about a girl named Dinah - The Dinosaur's Packed Lunch. I thoroughly my enjoyed it.