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2013-03-28 6:58 AM
in reply to: #4677103

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Champion
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SRQ, FL
Subject: RE: Terrible Children's Books

runningmon - 2013-03-27 6:19 PM I have four more months to figure all of this out before I'm legally responsible for what goes into this child's brain-- ack! Anybody got some lightly used Bernstein Bears they want to unload semi-cheap? Oh wait... They were pretty gender-role specific, weren't they?

Sign up for Dolly Parton's (yes that Dolly Parton) Imagination Library.  They will send you a free children's book every month until your child is 4 or 5 (cannot recall).  Some friends signed us up for both of our children (4 and 11).  It's really a wonderful program.  My daughter gets excited every time a book shows up in the mail.

http://usa.imaginationlibrary.com/



2013-03-28 4:37 PM
in reply to: #4674256

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Veteran
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Subject: RE: Terrible Children's Books

I haven't run across any books that I hate yet, but one movie that I just cannot stand is The Little Mermaid - whiny teenage daughter breaks the rules and in the end Daddy gives her what she wants.  Disgusting.

PS - my boys LOVE Captain Underpants.  I don't mind them, and they still read other chapter books, too.

2013-03-28 6:19 PM
in reply to: #4676159

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Subject: RE: Terrible Children's Books
scott319 - 2013-03-27 5:43 AM
TriRSquared - 2013-03-26 12:37 PM

"The Rainbow Fish" - teaching children have to give into peer pressure and give away things that are rightly theirs just to make other people like them...

Read it once to my daughter then thew it in the garbage...

Agreed.  Absolutely the worst message for a children's book  any story, ever.

Similar reason I don't let my kids watch Ni Hao, Kai-Lan cartoon anymore. A character doesn't get what he/she wants and has a full-blown temper tantrum every time I've watched it... and the other characters give in and pacify. Forget it.

2013-03-28 7:58 PM
in reply to: #4677450


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Subject: RE: Terrible Children's Books
TRS-- Thanks for the heads-up! We'll have to check it out.
2013-03-29 9:30 AM
in reply to: #4678482

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Master
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Midcoast Maine
Subject: RE: Terrible Children's Books
ApplePie - 2013-03-27 5:37 PM

I haven't run across any books that I hate yet, but one movie that I just cannot stand is The Little Mermaid - whiny teenage daughter breaks the rules and in the end Daddy gives her what she wants.  Disgusting.

PS - my boys LOVE Captain Underpants.  I don't mind them, and they still read other chapter books, too.

+ the message of change your true self for "love". Blech.

My kids are a little older - but they are really enjoying the Lightning Thief series - lots of Greek mythology and compelling reads.

2013-03-30 7:57 AM
in reply to: #4679078

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Master
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Sunbury, Pennsylvania
Subject: RE: Terrible Children's Books
itsallrelative_Maine - 2013-03-29 10:30 AM
ApplePie - 2013-03-27 5:37 PM

I haven't run across any books that I hate yet, but one movie that I just cannot stand is The Little Mermaid - whiny teenage daughter breaks the rules and in the end Daddy gives her what she wants.  Disgusting.

PS - my boys LOVE Captain Underpants.  I don't mind them, and they still read other chapter books, too.

+ the message of change your true self for "love". Blech.

I used to feel the way that both of you describe. I was the biggest hater of the Disney version of Little Mermaid you could find. I made grand pronouncements about how when I was a father of a daughter, she would be more secure than to have to change her identity to chase some boy. Why can't Triton make him into a merman? He's the king/god of the ocean!

But then I became the father of a daughter, and my take on the story has completely changed. Now, I see it as a parable of an over protective father whose provincial tyranny drives her away. He has to sacrifice himself to save her in the end. Had he not been such a fundamentalist and xenophobe, she wouldn't have so easily fallen for the witch's lies.

When we went to Disney in 2011 for my first goal race, I found myself in the Little Mermaid show with my little girl on my arm, crying like a baby. (Me not her) Whenever I hear that phrase of Ariel singing away her voice, I melt. Somewhere inside me, the vestiges of 20something hipster-me screams "dude who are you?!"

Now, I may have turned soft on that story, but I will still get on a soapbox about the horrible messages of the Lion King, which reinforces racial segregation, anti-intellectualism, and the divine right of kings.



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