Tag: Scandinavia

  • Free Radicals by Alice Munro Short Story Analysis

    Free Radicals by Alice Munro Short Story Analysis

    My reading of “Free Radicals” by Alice Munro (2008) is highly metaphorical. To me, this is a story about the Kubler-Ross stages of grief, and the new vulnerability older women feel when their male partner dies before them. Read literally, though, and this is the story of one woman’s brush with a serial murdering intruder […]

    Continue reading

  • Outside Over There by Maurice Sendak

    Outside Over There by Maurice Sendak

    This month I wrote a post on Teaching Kids How To Structure A Story. Today I continue with a selection of mentor texts to help kids see how it works. Today I look closely at a picture book classic by iconic American author/illustrator, Maurice Sendak. Outside Over There is a mythic journey of the imagination, with emphasis on atmosphere and emotion.…

    Continue reading

  • The Ideology Of Persistence In Children’s Literature Analysis

    The Ideology Of Persistence In Children’s Literature Analysis

    If you work hard you will find success. Persistence leads to success is a comforting truism, because we feel the future is under our own control. Work hard, you win. An episode of a Freakonomics podcast provides a strong, economically sound argument for sometimes giving up.  But you’ll be hard pressed to find a book for […]

    Continue reading

  • The Little Match Girl by Hans Christian Andersen

    The Little Match Girl by Hans Christian Andersen

    To a modern audience, The Little Match Girl is unbearably tragic. Perhaps, like me, you vividly recall reading your version of this story as a young kid and being profoundly affected. For me, it was probably the first time I considered the possibility of childhood death.

    Continue reading

  • Hygge is the word English needs to describe children’s literature

    Hygge is the word English needs to describe children’s literature

    Danes are scratching their heads about why an everyday word they’ve been using privately for generations is suddenly taking the English-speaking world by storm.

    Continue reading

  • The Three Billy Goats Gruff Fairytale Analysis

    The Three Billy Goats Gruff Fairytale Analysis

    Can you guess which country this “eat-me-when-I’m-fatter” produced this fairytale? I’ll drop some clues: Yes, it’s Norway. Rudin has a good sense of rhythm, and has retained all the things that are fun about this story as a read-aloud, but I feel the point of it is lost. WHERE TO HEAR THIS STORY I also recommend […]

    Continue reading

  • Roald Dahl: The Man Behind The Books

    I remember the day Roald Dahl died. I was in Year 7. I remember sitting at my desk, and where that desk was positioned in the classroom, thinking about how Roald Dahl had died. Australian author Paul Jennings describes the time he met Roald Dahl. In Untwisted, [Jennings’ autobiography] he recounts the experience of meeting […]

    Continue reading

  • 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 […]

    Continue reading

  • Islands and Symbolism in Literature

    Islands and Symbolism in Literature

    We see islands in the oldest literature we know, from Shakespeare’s The Tempest (Prospero’s Island) to Homer’s The Odyssey (Circe’s Island) to Jason and the Golden Fleece (Lemnos, Doilones, Cius etc). A well-known island from Greek mythology is Ogygia, considered ‘navel of the sea’. This island is mentioned in Homer’s Odyssey as the home of the nymph […]

    Continue reading

  • Comparative Children’s Literature: Finland

    Trends in Finnish children’s literature mirror trends in the English speaking world, but Finland is possibly more keen to keep its unique culture alive via children’s books. The Moomin stories are some of the weirdest and most inventive children’s books out there, and much beloved, especially in the Moomin family’s native Finland, where there is […]

    Continue reading

  • What Colour Is Your Sun?

    What Colour Is Your Sun?

    Different cultures view the sun differently. Ask a Western child to draw the sun and they will draw it yellow. Ask a Japanese child to draw the sun and they will draw it red. Our closest star is ‘actually’ white. I grew up in New Zealand and I drew it yellow. But when I lived as […]

    Continue reading

  • Walking, Floating, Creeping Houses

    Walking, Floating, Creeping Houses

    Included in the definition of ‘home’ is the idea of a stable, secure structure… which doesn’t get up and move! The concept of home is especially important in children’s stories, which explains the popularity of the home-away-home structure: Child leaves home, has a little adventure, then returns to security. The young reader falls into slumber, […]

    Continue reading

  • Mice in Children’s Literature

    Mice in Children’s Literature

    Mice are widely represented in folktales, both as protagonists and as helpers. Apparently, there is a subconscious identification on the part of children’s writers of a small and helpless child with one of the smallest animals, also know—maybe without reason—for its lack of courage.

    Continue reading

  • Bears In Art and Storytelling

    Bears In Art and Storytelling

    Perhaps you know a little person who absolutely love bears. I know one of those.  She loves stories about bears. Fortunately they are in no short supply.

    Continue reading

  • Revolting Rhymes

    I have clear memories of this book. First, I remember my father buying it for me in Paper Plus. I was in attendance. He thought I wouldn’t notice, then snuck it into my santa sack. Second, it was very unusual for my father to buy any books at all. Third, this was a whole-family read […]

    Continue reading

error: Content is protected