Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pout, Pout Fish. Sexual assault cures depression!
I LOVE Pout, Pout Fish! It’s not assault - it’s a kiss! Plus it has the best rhymes.
If you were swimming laps and some dude swam up and kissed you, you'd definitely think it was assault!
Mine is Berenstain bears--they are so long!
I was looking to see if anyone had Berenstain Bears. I couldn’t stand them as a child and never read them to my child. However, I admittedly can’t remember why I dislike them so much.![]()
I will remind you - in the longer stories, the rhymes are a stretch and they make fun of fathers in every book which I find demeaning.
Actually, I thought it was the other way around. There's one story called The Blame Game. The kids get in trouble and Mama becomes the stereotypical hysterical mom while Papa remains calm and comes up with the sensible solution. I find that part so annoying that I just scream and throw the book. Luckily DH is more relaxed and intervenes.
Anonymous wrote:Give a mouse a cookie. Teaches kids to be pushovers. No, Oliver, you don’t have to get him a glass of milk or any of the other crap he asks for.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Curious George books. George does whatever he wants and wreaks havoc due to his curiosity. Then twist, he saves the day because the annoying stunt he pulled happens to be fortuitous.
The early Curious George books aren't like that, though. The one where he goes to space, the one with him and the bunnies. He tries to be helpful and... well, he's curious... which inadvertently causes trouble. Kinda like kids, which is probably why they enjoy hearing the stories so much.
My DD used to get so frustrated with the Man with the Yellow Hat: “You know he’s going to get in trouble, he ALWAYS gets in trouble, why are you leaving him alone AGAIN? Doesn’t he ever learn anything, mom?”
Oh, man, Curious George and the Bicycle, where the Man in the Yellow Hat drives merrily off to work, leaving his adoptive kid/pet in the front yard surrounded by hammers, nails, and broken wooden staves...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love this thread. I'm a children's librarian, and this discussion pops up periodically in a variety of professional settings. Love You Forever, Giving Tree, and Rainbow Fish are definitely the top three.
Then why are they still at the library?
What are you a fascist or communist? In America we have books that you might not like because gasp! Some people like them!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Curious George books. George does whatever he wants and wreaks havoc due to his curiosity. Then twist, he saves the day because the annoying stunt he pulled happens to be fortuitous.
The early Curious George books aren't like that, though. The one where he goes to space, the one with him and the bunnies. He tries to be helpful and... well, he's curious... which inadvertently causes trouble. Kinda like kids, which is probably why they enjoy hearing the stories so much.
My DD used to get so frustrated with the Man with the Yellow Hat: “You know he’s going to get in trouble, he ALWAYS gets in trouble, why are you leaving him alone AGAIN? Doesn’t he ever learn anything, mom?”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Curious George books. George does whatever he wants and wreaks havoc due to his curiosity. Then twist, he saves the day because the annoying stunt he pulled happens to be fortuitous.
The early Curious George books aren't like that, though. The one where he goes to space, the one with him and the bunnies. He tries to be helpful and... well, he's curious... which inadvertently causes trouble. Kinda like kids, which is probably why they enjoy hearing the stories so much.