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9781565122413

What the Dormouse Said : Lessons for Grown-ups from Children's Books

by ; ;
  • ISBN13:

    9781565122413

  • ISBN10:

    1565122410

  • Format: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 1999-10-01
  • Publisher: Workman Pub Co

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Summary

A collection of over three hundred quotations from the best-loved children's books of all time, What the Dormouse Said brings together the wit and wisdom of such classics as Charlotte's Web, Peter Pan, Eloise, Goodnight Moon, and many others. Organized around twenty-one topics-courage and faith, love and friendship-these lines remind weary adults not to lose sight of the values and virtues they learned as kids-to recognize the importance of being yourself, to respect nature, to live adventurously, and to be defiant when it counts.With witty illustrations by Pierre Le-Tan, here is a book for new parents, grandparents, teachers and educators, and nostalgic baby boomers--a book that recaptures for all of us the joy of reading for the first time.

Author Biography

Amy Gash is a book editor who reads stories with her seven-year-old son. She lives with her family in New Jersey.

Table of Contents

Forewordp. IX
What I Learned from Children's Booksp. 1
Faith and Couragep. 7
Defiancep. 13
Imagination and Adventurep. 19
Animalsp. 25
Love and Friendshipp. 31
Practical Musingsp. 37
Character and Individualityp. 43
Family Woesp. 51
Acceptancep. 57
Eating Habitsp. 63
Naturep. 69
Sadnessp. 75
Goodnessp. 81
More Practical Musingsp. 85
Greed, Envy, Pride, and Slothp. 91
Songs and Storiesp. 97
Growing Wisep. 103
Silencep. 109
Hidden Truthsp. 113
Reverencep. 119
Growing Oldp. 125
Index by Booksp. 131
Acknowledgments and Permissionsp. 143
Table of Contents provided by Syndetics. All Rights Reserved.

Supplemental Materials

What is included with this book?

The New copy of this book will include any supplemental materials advertised. Please check the title of the book to determine if it should include any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.

The Used, Rental and eBook copies of this book are not guaranteed to include any supplemental materials. Typically, only the book itself is included. This is true even if the title states it includes any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.

Excerpts


Foreword

By Judith Viorst

While I was reading the pages of this book, I found myself leafing through family photograph albums. I paused to examine a picture of my youngest son, Alexander, who had been immortalized at his sartorial worst. He wore two unmatched socks and a pair of untied sneakers. His hair was alarmingly tousled; his face was smudged. His shorts were droopy and wrinkled, and from them dangled not just one, but two torn pockets. And his T-shirt boldly displayed the bright-red signature of a recent spaghetti dinner.

I looked at that picture and winced, and then I shuddered, and then I sighed and then--all of a sudden--I started to laugh. "Neatness," I observed to myself, quoting a line from this oh-so-helpful collection, "was not one of the things he aimed at in life." Once again I had discovered, in a children's book, exactly what I needed.

For I've always believed that, at their best, the language and the art of books for children are as good as it gets. At their best, the subjects treated in these books include almost all of our central human concerns. At their best, children's books offer insights we'll want to remember and ponder and savor and learn from and revel in. But you don't have to take my word for it; between the covers of this charming book are some of the countless treasures that writings for children offer to both kids and adults.

You will surely find words that speak to your condition. You may choose, for instance, to contemplate the solemnity of "Every passage has its price" or to let yourself be tickled by the deadpan humor of "It is helpful to know the proper way to behave, so one can decide whether or not to be proper." You may nod your head in agreement with the indisputable truth that "One doesn't contradict a hungry tiger," or with the quiet sagacity of "Sometimes a person needs a story more than food to stay alive." You may, when your husband is driving a tad too fast on the superhighway, observe between clenched teeth that "It often takes more courage to be a passenger than a driver." Or you may, like me, find words that will provide you with a cheering new perspective.

Ranging from the highly poetic to the matter of fact, WHAT THE DORMOUSE SAID tells us to choose freedom over safety, to get up when we're knocked down, to remember to take delight where we find it, to recognize what we can and cannot control, to treat people carefully, to ask the right questions, to listen more than we talk, and to understand that "Things are not untrue just because they never happened."

It tells us, too, that growing old has value because "to stay young always is also not to change." But at the same time it reminds us that we should never grow so old, or change so much, that we cannot find room in our hearts for the wisdom of children's books.

Copyright © 1999 Judith Viorst. All rights reserved.

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