Thursday, July 6, 2017
Advice Wanted: Best Fairy Tale Books for Young Children
We were given a book of Disney nursery rhymes and fairy tales for Pearson. One story in there is that of "Little Red Riding Minnie." It tells of Minnie, who is going to take cookies and cough drops to her sick grandmother, and how the big bad wolf is out to steal the cookies (no hint of actually wanting to harm anyone). Rather than eating the grandmother, he just takes her clothes off the clothesline and waits for Minnie outside. Then, he accidentally eats all the cough drops instead of the cookies, and runs away with eyes watering.
It's kind of humorous if you think of it as a parody, only it's not meant as a parody-it's meant to be safe for young children. (For more on this, check out Gypsy's post and contribution to this article on why children's theater dumbs down fairy tales). I used to have my own opinions on not dumbing down fairy tales for children, but I have to admit, now that I have my own child, I kind of get it-I'm not sure I want to be reading him bedtime stories about people being eaten. Of course, he's still a baby, and as he goes through different phases of development, hopefully I'll adjust too. (And I have to remind myself of the dangers of shielding your children too much, as Sleeping Beauty and Rapunzel remind us-it's better to educate your children about spindles than to pretend they don't exist, and keeping a teenager in a tower can't really keep them from growing up!)
I have my own collection of versions of "Beauty and the Beast", including some picture book versions, but other than that we don't have other fairy tale books for Pearson yet. He's still in the stage where in order to sit still for a book, it needs to have very little text on each page, and he needs to have a toy on hand to chew on, but I would love to get more fairy tales in his library. So, what would you recommend? I'm happy to start getting recommendations of books for when he gets older but would also like to have some on hand for now as well. I'm certainly not as familiar with children's books as I'm sure I'll get over the next few years, but one book I heartily recommend for kids of all ages (and adults!) is Mirror Mirror: A Book of Reverso Poems by Marilyn Singer, illustrated by Josee Masse. Each fairy tale is told from two different perspectives, with the second poem a reverse of the first, line by line-with only clever changes in punctuation to change the meaning. Long time readers may be sick of hearing about this book by now...(there is also a follow up, Follow Follow, that I have seen but don't own)
Have you thought of writing your own? And maybe printing out pictures to go with them, just for your son's bedtime?
ReplyDeleteI haven't thought of that! I could always find books with good pictures and make up my own narration too
DeleteUgh. I HATE that Disney book! It has barely any absolutes in it. All the 'evil' people are misunderstood and left on the loose (or alive to return to society at some point). It has the effect of disturbing young ones, making them uneasy and not able to relax that the 'bad' has been ultimately dealt with. The stories have no oomph at all. It almost doesn't matter that they happen. :/
ReplyDeleteI will have to go hunt down the books I read to my kiddo as a baby onward for you, but I do remember reading straight out of Lang's collections. Not all of them but a lot. I also had a couple of good other ones. The simple versions eg. 'ate them up' with no extra details go over well - the more graphic details, the more issues get raised. I also remember reading Howard Pyle's The Wonder Clock, and lots of illustrated books too.
I recommend starting with the flat classics and branching out as you feel comfortable. They're going to get given the Disney and sugary-PC version in preschool on with no input by you (you will have no choice) so I recommend starting soon, with basic books, telling it with puppets (keeping things simple and boundaries clear so your son doesn't worry about bad people coming back), and there's always those old 45 records you can now find audio files for online to listen to together. A lot of those inspired further love as a young child for me and others I know and I used some for my son too with great results.
The best way is always you directly doing some sort of storytelling for your child though. Doesn't have to be perfect and you don't have to remember every detail. You can use anything as props as you go for extra fun (even tissues and blocks and spoons!) and the more you do it, the more fun it gets. I admit - even with experience in theater and teaching, I felt super awkward trying to reconstruct tales for my son at first - perhaps because they mean so much to me - but it wasn't long before it became very fun, and he still asks me to tell him stories in my words. :)
Haha yeah that Disney book was left at my parents' house after the baby shower and...I never bothered to bring it home!
DeleteThat's a really good distinction, to look for books that tell the story simply and avoid gory details/illustrations.
I used to tell fairy tales to the girls I babysat for years-they were older though. I do try to talk to Pearson a lot throughout the day but you're right it is awkward to start narrating stories! I don't know why, because usually I'm just telling him what I'm doing and telling a story would seem to be less awkward than describing each item of laundry as I'm folding it...
Oh and make sure you add The Stinky Cheese Man at some point. You can even pull out/extract the individual tales to tell on their own and it works - it's a very versatile - and fun and silly - book. It's also a parody so make sure you have the regular versions around too but from memory, you can still use it without (your son) being very familiar with the originals too. :)
ReplyDeleteThis is a very tricky one for me, as even when I was a very little kid I was still told quite a few of the darker versions of the stories. Both "Great Fairy Tales Treasure Chest" and "Richard Scarry's Animal Nursery Tales" are mixed bags, as they both sometimes choose lighter versions for some of the tales, both opt for darker versions for some of the other tales.
ReplyDeleteI also note that sometimes loose ends left in the tales could be a problem. In Rapunzel, I always wondered as a very young child what happened to the witch. My parents came up with an explanation that maybe the hair fell out of the two and she was trapped there forever, but for me that explanation was bogus because every smart little kid knows that a witch can use her magic to make a ladder. So my brother and I (who would often act out a lot of the stories we liked, playing multiple characters and such at a very young age) made up an ending where Rapunzel and the Prince kill the witch in an epic battle, and we in all seriousness considered it to be the real ending to the story. But while that worked for us, I know other children don't have as broad of an imagination to invent new endings like that.
Similar with the Gingerbread Man, where he gets eaten at the end. I always took it for granted that since he was a food, he was supposed to be eaten at the end, and that it was a good thing. But I know that other children won't think the same way, and will probably sympathize with the Gingerbread Man. A good way to tackle this story when you read it to a child might be to pause every once in a while and say, "Who's going to eat him?" This might put a child on track with trying not to sympathize with the Gingerbread Man, but to hope that someone eats him at the end.
Really, the tamest story I can come up with right now is "The Three Bears." It's really difficult trying to figure out what a child is going to like to hear, because everyone is different. I'll try to think of more later.
That's good to hear from someone's perspective who WAS told darker fairy tales as a younger child-because it's so rare! And clearly it didn't seem to traumatize you, but instead promoted interest in fairy tales, so that's good reason right there to not shy away from darker elements.
DeleteI really like that idea of asking the child "who's going to eat him?" throughout Gingerbread Man-you can do that same type of thing to prepare kids for other potentially disturbing parts of fairy tales too.
That's surprising, because the Disney Bedtime stories/lullabies book I had as a kid had the verse of "Schlaf, Kindlein, schlaf" about a black sheep biting children that are unwilling to sleep even though none of my other lullaby books had that stanza. Perhaps Disney Germany has different policies than Disney US or the policy has changed in the last two decades. (That said scaring children into obedience is exactly the wrong kind of "dark stuff")
ReplyDelete[Obligatory "Not a parent" disclaimer]What I'd look out for are the pictures. First of all as long as your child can read you can make up the text anyway ;) I think that's how story time went most of the time in my family: A person telling a story freestyle while pointing at certain details in the appropriate picture. Secondly whenever I was scared of a book as a child it was almost never because of the plot, but because of the pictures. Of course as an adult you can't always know what children or rather your child will find scary, so you have to trust your gut on that and read your son's reactions.
As for the "Mirror, Mirror" book it seems fun, but more for older children that are already familiar with the traditional tellings. It seems like the fairy tale version of the "Why did the chicken cross the road" joke where children who are told it too early don't get enjoyment out of the subversion, because they're not familiar with the formula yet.
I'm sure Disney has tons of storybooks aimed for all different audiences...I'm sure the one we have was aimed towards an especially young audience, and the assumption is probably that American parents are more likely to object to any violent/sad elements.
DeleteThat's a really good point. I'm sure we parents assume our kids pay attention to every single word we read when they probably mainly just look at the pictures, or maybe don't understand a lot of the text anyway and use the pictures to understand what it means.
And yes, the "Mirror Mirror" book would be confusing to someone who wasn't familiar with the traditional plots of fairy tales, I didn't really think about that. It's actually kind of amazing we all seem to be familiar with certain plots early on, given that there are so many parody versions, "kid friendly" versions, etc., and a lot of parents don't just read their children straight up fairy tales.
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ReplyDelete