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  • Jack And The Beanstalk History and Symbolism

    Jack And The Beanstalk History and Symbolism

    Jack and the Beanstalk is also known as Jack The Giant Killer, which kind of ruins the ending, so no wonder they changed it. WHERE TO HEAR “JACK AND THE BEANSTALK” READ ALOUD If you’d like to hear “Jack and the Beanstalk” read aloud, I recommend the retellings by Parcast’s Tales podcast series. (They have

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    September 3, 2016
  • The Velveteen Rabbit by Marjery Williams

    The Velveteen Rabbit by Marjery Williams

    The Velveteen Rabbit is a picturebook by Margery Williams from the first Golden Age of Children’s Literature. First published in 1922, The Velveteen Rabbit has been re-illustrated many times since. You become. It takes a long time. That’s why it doesn’t happen often to people who break easily, or have sharp edges, or who have

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    September 2, 2016
  • Works to Compare and Contrast with Hilda Bewildered

    Hilda Bewildered is an illustrated short story book app published by Slap Happy Larry. Here are some other stories to compare and contrast. Non-fiction: Short: Walking Tall When You’re Not Tall At All Kids of all genders are highly rewarded for conforming to — and exaggerating — our own masculinities and femininities. For women that means: curvaceous

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    August 30, 2016
  • The Foolish Wishes by Charles Perrault

    The Foolish Wishes passed me by as a kid, but there are no shortage of tales about characters granted 3 wishes by some sort of genie/supernatural being.

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    August 26, 2016
  • Bluebeard Fairy Tale Analysis

    Bluebeard Fairy Tale Analysis

    “Bluebeard” is a classic fairytale — the O.G. tale of domestic violence. Any story in which a fearsome husband murders his young wife is probably a “Bluebeard” descendent. The husband in this tale is monstrous, and related to the archetype of the ogre. If you’d like to listen to the tale, I recommend the (free)

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    August 24, 2016
  • Puss In Boots by Charles Perrault Fairy Tale Analysis

    Puss In Boots by Charles Perrault Fairy Tale Analysis

    These days, modern children are probably most likely to have encountered Puss In Boots in the second Shrek movie. The most resonant scene for us all is probably the bit where Puss is revealed to be a manipulative little bastard, making his eyes big and cute in order to get what he wants. I admit, it’s…

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    August 23, 2016
  • Sleeping Beauty And Cannibalism

    Sleeping Beauty And Cannibalism

    If you’ve already read Angela Carter’s short stories, in which she rewrites famous tales as feminist ones, you may well hear her scoffing silently in your head as you read these tales, mostly by Charles Perrault, who added his own paternalistic, misogynist morals as paragraphs at the ends. And if you’ve never read these tales

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    August 22, 2016
  • Freaks and Geeks Storytelling Tips

    Freaks and Geeks Storytelling Tips

    Freaks and Geeks is a coming-of-age drama made in the late 1990s, set in 1980. Though it was cancelled after one season, that’s not because it wasn’t good. Perhaps the audience assumed  this was yet another high school drama done badly. This show did a lot of stuff you’ll have seen before, but did it

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    August 21, 2016
  • The Emperor’s New Clothes by Hans Christian Andersen Fairy Tale Analysis

    The Emperor’s New Clothes by Hans Christian Andersen Fairy Tale Analysis

    Always remember that the crowd which applauds your coronation is the same crowd that will applaud your beheading.  People like a show. Going Postal, Terry Pratchett If you’re here because you’ve been assigned to write an essay on emperors, be sure to double check which emperor you’re meant to be writing about. A BRIEF HISTORY

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    August 17, 2016
  • Boy Friendly, Girl Friendly

    What is meant by boy friendly and girl friendly? Sometimes a Google search screenshot speaks a thousand words: Girl Friendly Links Strong Female Characters In Fiction from Common Sense Media 100 YA Books For The Feminist Reader from Bitch Media 9 FEMALE CHARACTERS WE WISH WE’D BEEN MORE LIKE IN HIGH SCHOOL from The Mary

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    August 14, 2016
  • The Do-Something Day by Joe Lasker (1982) Analysis

    The Do-Something Day by Joe Lasker (1982) Analysis

    The Do-something Day is one of those didactic stories in which the parental figures are too busy working to play with their precious little children. In such stories, the child usually goes out and has their own adventure, or an elderly neighbour/grandparent steps in to fill the psychological need, which is loneliness/boredom. And that’s what

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    August 12, 2016
  • The Day Patch Stood Guard by Elizabeth Laird and Colin Reeder (1990) Analysis

    The Day Patch Stood Guard by Elizabeth Laird and Colin Reeder (1990) Analysis

    The Day Patch Stood Guard is a New Zealand farming picture book from the 1980s which is, at its heart, a man and his dog story. Notice anything a bit different about the cover of The Day Patch Stood Guard? The usual convention is to credit the writer first and the illustrator second. Here the

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    August 11, 2016
  • Bertie’s Escapade by Kenneth Grahame (1949)

    Bertie’s Escapade by Kenneth Grahame (1949)

    Bertie’s Escapade is a carnivalesque, adorable book which would be a great pre-reader if you’re wondering whether your child is ready for a Wind In The Willows read aloud. You’ll recognise the illustrator as the very same who depicted Winnie-the-Pooh. That said, I can’t resist digging a little deeper into this story, because there is a

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    August 10, 2016
  • Mr Gumpy’s Outing by John Burningham Analysis

    Mr Gumpy’s Outing by John Burningham Analysis

    Mr Gumpy’s Outing is a picture book for young readers who are still learning English — a variety of verbs are introduced in a way that will help toddlers to remember them.

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    August 9, 2016
  • Where’s Spot? concept picture book by Eric Hill Analysis

    Where’s Spot? concept picture book by Eric Hill Analysis

    Concept books exist partly to teach young children basic concepts: ABCs, numbers, colours, opposites, time, size, and in this book, prepositions. Concept books are most often unmemorable. I can tell you at various times our bookshelf has housed cardboard books with the name of a colour on each page, but I got rid of those.

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    August 5, 2016
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