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6 books Bill and Melinda Gates read to their kids

Sam McBratney's "Guess How Much I Love You"

6 books Bill and Melinda Gates read to their kids

Robert Munsch's "Love You Forever"

Robert Munsch

Gates tells NPR that she and husband Bill loved reading their kids' favorite bedtimes story to them.

"It's about life from birth to death, about the continuity of generations, and as we read we could see the road ahead for our family," she says. "The kids never understood why we were always crying by the time we finished."

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Jacqueline West's "The Books of Elsewhere"

Jacqueline West

"As my two younger kids got older, we started reading Jacqueline West's 'The Books of Elsewhere,' about a girl who gets transported inside mysterious paintings on the walls," Gates tells NPR. "We'd pull up to school a little early every morning and read these silly, fun books together, as a way to start the day with our priorities in the right place."

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Philip Pullman's "His Dark Materials" series

Philip Pullman

Pullman's series includes "The Golden Compass," "The Subtle Knife," and "The Amber Spyglass."

"My son Rory and I went through a phase in which we read a lot of dystopian fiction together, and we loved the writing and the imagination in these books so much that we talked about them at family dinner and went around the table figuring out what our daemons would be if people actually had daemons," Gates tells NPR.

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Ray Bradbury's "Fahrenheit 451"

Ray Bradbury

Gates tells NPR that she always loved author Ray Bradbury's writing, and she thought her son Rory would feel the same way.

"When I started reading Fahrenheit 451 aloud to him, we were both struck by its specificity — not just the specificity of the language but also the crispness with which he brings the world and its issues to light," she says.

Gates says they were astounded when they found out Bradbury wrote the novel in nine days at a typewriter he rented for 20 cents an hour.

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Mark Haddon's "The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time"

Mark Haddon

Most recently, Gates tells NPR that she read this book after her sister saw the play adaptation in London and suggested reading the book.

"The book gives you a different perspective on a kid with Asperger's," Gates says. "His family really loves him but they're also under a lot of stress, and it takes a real emotional toll on them. So we all enjoyed peeking into the mind and heart of somebody who looked at the world a little differently."

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