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I don't give a fig if it is a kid's book, Charlotte's Web is one of the most well-crafted stories ever written. This classic children's tale deserves 5 stars for story craft and language usage alone! (Read your Strunk & White to understand this man's talents in that regard.) The fact that it's a heart-warmer/wrencher clinches it. Never was I made to love pigs and spiders so much in my life. Charlotte's Web will always rank high amongst my favorites. But why, for the love of god, did they mak I don't give a fig if it is a kid's book, Charlotte's Web is one of the most well-crafted stories ever written.
This classic children's tale deserves 5 stars for story craft and language usage alone! (Read your Strunk & White to understand this man's talents in that regard.) The fact that it's a heart-warmer/wrencher clinches it. Never was I made to love pigs and spiders so much in my life. Charlotte's Web will always rank high amongst my favorites. But why, for the love of god, did they make us watch the cartoon version of this tear-jerker in school? Did they want to make us weep embarrassingly in front of one another? If so, mission accomplished, you sadistic school district!
If you've never read by, you are utterly missing out on a classic Newbery Honor award winner. Go to the library now and borrow this book first published in 1952. You shouldn't buy it (unless you have children or are giving it as a present), but choose to embrace the entire experience of being a small child walking through your public library's doors, searching for an amazing book and finding yourself bringing home a tale that will make you cry and fall in love all at t If you've never read by, you are utterly missing out on a classic Newbery Honor award winner.
Go to the library now and borrow this book first published in 1952. You shouldn't buy it (unless you have children or are giving it as a present), but choose to embrace the entire experience of being a small child walking through your public library's doors, searching for an amazing book and finding yourself bringing home a tale that will make you cry and fall in love all at the same time. And don't spoil it by watching the cartoon or regular movies made based on the book until you've read it yourself! It's important.At a quick glance, a little pig arrives on a new farm and is basically going to be entered into a contest to win a prize for the farm owner. But the pig is scared and confused, turning to all sorts of other farm animals for love and guidance at his new home: chickens, mice, birds and of course, Charlotte, the friendly spider.
To help save the pig, Charlotte spins webs overnight about the pig's talents in the hopes that he'll be saved from the. Chopping block even if he wins the contest for best pig. But there's so much more going on in this book.Charlotte is everyone's mother. She's everyone's teacher. She's everyone's friend.
As Pollyanna as it will sound, we should all have a Charlotte in our life to help us grow up and mature into terrific, radiant and humble human beings. (I'll avoid calling us 'some pig' as the other message she crafts). All the lessons children can learn from this book are important, even the ones about death. I won't spoil it, but despite all the efforts across all the animals and the people in this treasure, someone doesn't make it. It's on the same level as 'Bambi' in my opinion when it comes to a must-read for children, even if the harsh realities of life are exposed.Please go read it.:).
My thoughts in a nutshellCharlotte’s Web is one of my favorite childhood books. I watched it so many times and never got bored with it.The story is aboutSkip over this point if you don't like the sneak peek.A little pig who wants to see the first show and who wants to live instead of becoming sausages.What impressed me the most 😊This little story has many important feelings and lesson. It teaches us to respect other living creatures and how to live side by side in peace. It told about humiMy thoughts in a nutshellCharlotte’s Web is one of my favorite childhood books. I watched it so many times and never got bored with it.The story is aboutSkip over this point if you don't like the sneak peek.A little pig who wants to see the first show and who wants to live instead of becoming sausages.What impressed me the most 😊This little story has many important feelings and lesson. It teaches us to respect other living creatures and how to live side by side in peace.
It told about humility and explained how important it is to have a great friendship. A friend who does anything to saved her little buddy’s life. A friend who once made a promise and now she will go through fire and water to keep her word.I’ve become such a sensitive little girl if the story is about an animal’s death. I’m feeling sorry about all of them. In my world, I think they have soul and they are sentinent beings.This book is an amazing classic, and it made me emotional. Haha.Make a conclusionI gave it 5 stars because it is perfect for me. It has a much valuable lesson and I really appreciate it.I recommend it to everyone who hasn’t read it.
Wait a second! Why don’t you read it yet? Go to the library, NOW! Or watch the movie I recommend it too.Atmosphere collage aka.
How did I imagine the book vibes? 'pologies to anybody following my reviews in hope of insights into epic fantasy novels - I get through more kids' stuff reading to my little girl (who is too disabled to do it for herself).Charlotte's Web is a book I've been aware of for nearly 40 years but somehow managed to avoid reading when I was little. We picked it up at the hospice last week and read the first half, then had to buy a copy at Waterstones yesterday to finish it off (59 years in print and it's still selling for £6.99 in pap 'pologies to anybody following my reviews in hope of insights into epic fantasy novels - I get through more kids' stuff reading to my little girl (who is too disabled to do it for herself).Charlotte's Web is a book I've been aware of for nearly 40 years but somehow managed to avoid reading when I was little. We picked it up at the hospice last week and read the first half, then had to buy a copy at Waterstones yesterday to finish it off (59 years in print and it's still selling for £6.99 in paperback!)The book's a classic for good reason. It delivers an emotional but refreshingly unsentimental story with twists and turns, and inadvertantly lets us have a look at rural American life in the late 1940's. In addition to a strong and engaging story E.B White has powerful prose that doesn't confuse a child, but carries more weight than you're likely to see in most children's stories.There's a circle of life theme going on, the amusing and varied anthropomorphising of various animals, a county show and prizes to be awarded, oh my!
But putting a welcome edge on all this is the bald fact that the pig you can see on the cover is balanced on a constant knife edge with people gearing up to reduce him to bacon and ham at every turn. And although there are tender moments in the story, it's never saccharine.slight spoiler. the rat never comes through with a change of heart, the little girl grows up and loses interest in the animals.end slight spoiler.All in all a fine children's book. Perhaps it I'd read it when I was 7 I'd be giving it 5.It also contains the saddest line in children's fiction: No one was with her when she died. This lovely world, these precious days.' Charlotte, a spiderI always get in the mood for this book when county fair season rolls around.
Ah, the midway with it's dizzying rides and scary carny folk. The agriculture buildings featuring prize-winning giant produce and lovingly crafted quilts. And the yummy scents of frying dough competing with the much earthier smells emanating from the livestock tents.It smelled of hay and it smelled of manure. It smelled of the perspiration of tired h '.
This lovely world, these precious days.' Charlotte, a spiderI always get in the mood for this book when county fair season rolls around. Ah, the midway with it's dizzying rides and scary carny folk. The agriculture buildings featuring prize-winning giant produce and lovingly crafted quilts. And the yummy scents of frying dough competing with the much earthier smells emanating from the livestock tents.It smelled of hay and it smelled of manure. It smelled of the perspiration of tired horses and the wonderful sweet breath of patient cows. It often had a sort of peaceful smell - as though nothing bad could ever happen again in the world.I always pay a visit to the cows, sheep and pigs temporarily housed there, and try not to think about how many of them are doomed, already auctioned off to local restaurants.
With that sad fact in mind, is it any wonder how this fanciful tale can grip the imagination and tug at the heart. The story of Zuckerman's Famous Pig - Wilbur, the Pig Who Lived!The book begins with our hero narrowly avoiding the ax, saved from death by a young girl who promises to raise him. He grows and thrives under her care, but soon he's sentenced to a lonely life in a pen at her uncle's farm. But fret not, for he soon meets Charlotte, a large grey spider with an impeccable vocabulary.It is truly the beginning of a beautiful and unforgettable friendship.I know this is a childhood favorite for many readers, but I was introduced to these characters not through the book, but by the 1973 animated film.Because of this, I will always associate Paul Lynde's memorably snarky voice with Templeton the rat.' What's in it for meeee?' I should be ashamed to admit that I didn't read the book until 2011, but I'm not. I think I appreciated it more fully as an aging adult than I would have as a kid.
Having lost some friends and both parents, I know how fleeting life can be and how important it is to grab onto every last experience and memory. How strange that it is the wisdom of a spider that reminds us of what matters most in our lives.No pig ever had truer friends, and he realized that friendship is one of the most satisfying things in the world.Adding to the joy of the book are the sweet illustrations by Garth Williams.So thank you, Mr. White, for your most marvelous book. I can think of no other author who could make an arachnophobe like me shed tears over the death of a spider. I have been familiar with the story for most of my life, but never read it until now.Wilbur the pig is born a runt, and the farmer decides he must face the axe.
Kind-hearted little Fern intercedes and saves him. She cares for the undersized pig, who later goes to a nearby farm. Wilbur's life is nearly idyllic until he discovers the fate that has been woven for him: he will likely be the next Christmas ham. Horrified, he looks desperately for a door of escape. His pleas for help are overhead by a I have been familiar with the story for most of my life, but never read it until now.Wilbur the pig is born a runt, and the farmer decides he must face the axe.
Kind-hearted little Fern intercedes and saves him. She cares for the undersized pig, who later goes to a nearby farm. Wilbur's life is nearly idyllic until he discovers the fate that has been woven for him: he will likely be the next Christmas ham. Horrified, he looks desperately for a door of escape.
His pleas for help are overhead by a large grey spider who is almost invisible in the doorway. She decides to try to alter the thread by which his destiny is hanging, but will she succeed?The barnyard animals, while displaying some human characteristics-Charlotte the spider can read and even has a smattering of Latin-behave like the animals they are. The geese are noisy and silly; the rat is sly and greedy; the pig is good-natured and always hungry; the spider, while kindly, is also an opportunistic and bloodthirsty killerThe story is one of friendship, loyalty, and self-sacrifice. While at times it threatens to cross over into a sort of Victorian sentimentality, it never quite does, because the author injects touches of humour and irony into the portrayal of both animal and human characters. Charlotte's Web, E.B.
WhiteCharlotte's Web is a children's novel by American author E. White and illustrated by Garth Williams; it was published in October 15, 1952, by Harper & Brothers. The novel tells the story of a pig named Wilbur and his friendship with a barn spider named Charlotte. When Wilbur is in danger of being slaughtered by the farmer, Charlotte writes messages praising Wilbur (such as 'Some Pig') in her web in order to persuade the farmer to let him live.تاریخ نخستین خوانش: Charlotte's Web, E.B. WhiteCharlotte's Web is a children's novel by American author E. White and illustrated by Garth Williams; it was published in October 15, 1952, by Harper & Brothers. The novel tells the story of a pig named Wilbur and his friendship with a barn spider named Charlotte.
When Wilbur is in danger of being slaughtered by the farmer, Charlotte writes messages praising Wilbur (such as 'Some Pig') in her web in order to persuade the farmer to let him live.تاریخ نخستین خوانش: روز سی و یکم ماه آگوست سال 1972 میلادیعنوان: کارتنک شارلوت؛ نویسنده: ئی.بی. وایت؛ مترجم: مهشید امیرشاهی؛ تهران، امیرکبیر، کتابهای جیبی، انتشارات فرانکلین، 1350، در 173 ص، چاپ دوم 1353؛ چاپ دیگر: تهران، علمی فرهنگی، 1383؛ در 168 ص؛ چاپ دیگر: تهران، علمی فرهنگی، پرنده آبی، 1395؛ شابک: 832؛ داستانهای نویسندگان امریکایی - سده 20 مدخترى به نام: «فرن»، خوکى به نام: «ویلبر» را، از مرگ نجات مىدهد، اما میداند که خوک، سرانجام به خاطر گوشتش، کشته خواهد شد. ویلبر در مزرعه ى عمو هومر، با عنکبوتى به نام: «شارلوت»، آشنا مىشود. شارلوت با بافتن واژه هایی روى تورهایش، که ویلبر را با صفات عجیب و غریب توصیف مىکند، او را از مرگى که در انتظارش است، نجات مىدهد. ویلبر، مردم را از کشتزارها، و روستاهاى دور و نزدیک، به تماشاى خود مىکشاند، و سرانجام در مسابقه ای در بازار مکاره، برنده مىشود. شارلوت، که نیرویش را با بافتن تورها از دست داده،.؛ ا. One of my favorite childhood memories is of reading this book with my mother.
I remember how much I giggled at some of the funny situations and cried especially when we read it the first few times. Sobbing into my pillow with my mom rubbing my back I wondered why Charlotte had to die. My mom patiently explaining the gift Charlotte left for Wilbur. Even now I feel a bit of a lump in my throat. It was treasures like this that started my love of books and reading.I loved it so much I don't know ho One of my favorite childhood memories is of reading this book with my mother. I remember how much I giggled at some of the funny situations and cried especially when we read it the first few times.
Sobbing into my pillow with my mom rubbing my back I wondered why Charlotte had to die. My mom patiently explaining the gift Charlotte left for Wilbur. Even now I feel a bit of a lump in my throat. It was treasures like this that started my love of books and reading.I loved it so much I don't know how many times I read it over the years. Such atimeless classic that will continue to be enjoyed for generations to come. It was easyto understand and I loved the illustrations. The characters were so well developed and completely lovable.
I wanted to move to a farm right away and have my very own baby pig. So many life lessons.It was all in there! The meaning of true friendship, love, life's adventures, miracles, death, trust, betrayal, sorrow and the passing of time.
Enjoyable to both children and adults I hope everyone reads this book at least once in their lives. Truly a timeless classic. 'I don't deserve it. I've never done anything for you.'
'You have been my friend,' replied Charlotte. 'That in itself is a tremendous thing.”Wilbur is some pig who is Radiant and humble. On the top of that, he could do a mean back flip like the Karate Kid.But would you believe me if I said that this radiant pig was almost killed. This is Wilbur's remarkable journey from almost being bacon to a beacon in the community! But this is not just his Journey. It's about Fern, the little g 'I don't deserve it.
I've never done anything for you.' 'You have been my friend,' replied Charlotte. 'That in itself is a tremendous thing.”Wilbur is some pig who is Radiant and humble.

On the top of that, he could do a mean back flip like the Karate Kid.But would you believe me if I said that this radiant pig was almost killed. This is Wilbur's remarkable journey from almost being bacon to a beacon in the community! But this is not just his Journey. It's about Fern, the little girl who saved Wilbur's life when he was just a runt, and it's about Charlotte, a smart and sweet spider who befriends Wilbur.And Charlotte can spell! It's like she has eaten a spelling bee!.wink wink.It's a great Children's book. If I were a kid, I would've loved it even more. And as an adult, (well, an almost adult) I loved the descriptions on summer (It was almost as if I could feel my childhood!) and Charlotte's protective instincts towards Wilbur.
I was not quite sure about parts focusing on Fern. They seemed a bit off towards the end.Oddly enough, Charlotte also reminded me of the characters from.
Well, food for thought.In the end, Charlotte's Web is a story about kindness and love. It's about reaffirming faith in a person's personality and values rather than appearances. And above all, It's about the value of friendship.TL:DR?
Update 6/2018: I will boldly assert here that I think this is the greatest children's book ever written, and I am embarking today on my 4th read of this classic. Total war warhammer 2 quest battle bug. It is my youngest child's turn to discover the joys and sorrows of friendship and of life, as presented by one of my favorite writers, Mr.
Rest in peace, Andy, you beautiful man.Original review:This is quite ridiculous, that I should read this, at 42-years-old, for the third time in my life, and end up blubbering hot tears Update 6/2018: I will boldly assert here that I think this is the greatest children's book ever written, and I am embarking today on my 4th read of this classic. It is my youngest child's turn to discover the joys and sorrows of friendship and of life, as presented by one of my favorite writers, Mr.
Rest in peace, Andy, you beautiful man.Original review:This is quite ridiculous, that I should read this, at 42-years-old, for the third time in my life, and end up blubbering hot tears all over my face and down the front of my shirt.I can't get over that my youngest, at 5-years-old, sat through the entire book this week, mesmerized by the brilliant and timeless story-telling. She giggled, frequently, at the funny passages, and then she laughed at me, her grown mother, crying a river for the last 40 pages. I honestly cried to the point of being physically incapable of reading out loud.And then, as Charlotte's babies drifted away shouting 'Good-bye! My daughter's face contorted strangely and the next thing I knew, she was face down on the floor, sobbing uncontrollably.This is one powerful story. I grew up without reading this book. For some, that seems to be unimaginable. I can maybe understand why.
My wife and I are reading it now, or I should say, I am reading it aloud before bed, and it's really wonderful. I could totally see why it would be a kind of life-formative book. I was reading a passage last night and laughing at it (there is so much in here that is really funny), and it made me wonder about the level of the humor.
That is, would the kid me have thought this was funny or is I grew up without reading this book. For some, that seems to be unimaginable. I can maybe understand why. My wife and I are reading it now, or I should say, I am reading it aloud before bed, and it's really wonderful.
I could totally see why it would be a kind of life-formative book. I was reading a passage last night and laughing at it (there is so much in here that is really funny), and it made me wonder about the level of the humor. That is, would the kid me have thought this was funny or is it my adult self?
And I think probably the kid would have. This is all to say that reading it now, as an adult, it gives me an appreciation for kids' minds, and kids' books that take them seriously, even in their humor.
I hope that all makes sense. I'm a late comer to the Harry Potter books, too, but was really delighted by them in some of the same ways.But-to get back to 'Charlotte's Web'-there's a section about the end of summer, a couple chapters away from their Fair trip. White makes this lovely kind of song about the end of the season and the coming of Fall and the kind of beauty and dread and tinged sadness of it all. My god, it was affecting.
That's something that I probably would not have picked up on as a kid, but I think that has more to do with kid-me than with most kids. I know my wife remembered that part distinctly, in fact it is one of the reasons we went back to this book now. We have recently moved from Minnesota, our home for about four years, and Fair Time there just passed. We really experienced the sort of sad beauty of summer's end there. In our new place in Chapel Hill it hasn't happened quite yet.
It is still hot and very dry from drought, so I don't know if there will be that kind of fading moment or not. We'll have to see.Anyhow, when a book for kids (whatever-for all of us) can make you laugh and cry and think about the beautiful sadness of death-then, damn, what can you do but ramble? I have been listening to or reading Charlotte's Web since 1983. My first grade teacher, Mrs. Bunting, read this magical book to our class, and I can vividly remember sitting on my carpet square, entranced. Her reading that book to our class was the highlight of each day. Later that year, there was a movie in the theaters, and we went to see it as a class field trip.
From my memory, everyone in class was excited about the book and the movie. This was book was that important in the lives of early I have been listening to or reading Charlotte's Web since 1983. My first grade teacher, Mrs. Bunting, read this magical book to our class, and I can vividly remember sitting on my carpet square, entranced.
Her reading that book to our class was the highlight of each day. Later that year, there was a movie in the theaters, and we went to see it as a class field trip. From my memory, everyone in class was excited about the book and the movie. This was book was that important in the lives of early readers.I also remember the book fair that school year, and my mom allowed me to buy one book (and bookmark- these were the days of unicorns and rainbows, and my first bookmark had both. I'm sure you can guess what my purchase was.
My copy of Charlotte's Web was read more times than I could ever possibly keep track, and as some of my book friends know, even at age 6, I worked hard to keep that well-loved book in pristine condition. 😉 We still have my copy somewhere, and I'm on a mission to find it.All of that to say, when Audible had a sale recently on the audio read by E.B. White in the 1970s, I quickly bought it.
You know an audio is good when you are instantly ready to listen to it again. There is nothing better than the author of THE perfect book reading his own perfect words. So much love and connection in his voice, tone, and inflection.
Some books are full of magic that lives in your heart forever, and Charlotte's Web is certainly in mine.Summer 2017 Read #18. Within 3 minutes of reviewing its Top 100 Novels Written in English List, I knew The Modern Library was irrelevant. That's because it failed to include CHARLOTTE'S WEB. I mean, I realize that children's literature is considered a joke by most intellectuals, but get serious. Anybody who reads this story and fails to recognize its greatness doesn't really like books, in my opinion.Not only does CHARLOTTE'S WEB feature one of the most ingenious plots in all of literature, its prose is breathtaking. Within 3 minutes of reviewing its Top 100 Novels Written in English List, I knew The Modern Library was irrelevant.
That's because it failed to include CHARLOTTE'S WEB. I mean, I realize that children's literature is considered a joke by most intellectuals, but get serious. Anybody who reads this story and fails to recognize its greatness doesn't really like books, in my opinion.Not only does CHARLOTTE'S WEB feature one of the most ingenious plots in all of literature, its prose is breathtaking. Notice how White evokes the arrival of winter on the Zuckerman farm in one short paragraph:'The autumn days grew shorter, Lurvy brought the squashes and pumpkins in from the garden and piled them on the barn floor, where they wouldn't get nipped on frosty nights. The maples and birches turned bright colors and the wind shook them and they dropped their leaves one by one to the ground. Under the wild apple trees in the pasture, the little red apples lay thick on the ground, and the sheep gnawed them and the geese gnawed them and foxes came in the night and sniffed them.
One evening, just before Christmas, snow began falling. It covered the house and barn and fields and woods. Wilbur had never seen snow before.' I mean, what could be more evocative or sensual? And the fact that White does this in such simple language only underscores his reputation as a great writer.If you have fond memories of CHARLOTTE'S WEB from childhood, I urge you to read it again. I wish the folks at The Modern Library had before compiling their list.
It may sound weird but this is the first time I am reading this book. I don’t know how I missed out on it when I was a kid.
Maybe it was the Famous 5 or Hardy Boys or Nancy Drew. Anyway, if I had read it as a kid I might have mustered some sympathy for Wilbur. Right now though, I am just mad.
Such a whinny and annoying crybaby. Met enough people like him in real life. Poor Charlotte!My personnel bitchy nature aside, this book was amazing. A quick read, but it makes an impact. Beautiful lessons It may sound weird but this is the first time I am reading this book. I don’t know how I missed out on it when I was a kid. Maybe it was the Famous 5 or Hardy Boys or Nancy Drew.
Anyway, if I had read it as a kid I might have mustered some sympathy for Wilbur. Right now though, I am just mad. Such a whinny and annoying crybaby. Met enough people like him in real life. Poor Charlotte!My personnel bitchy nature aside, this book was amazing. A quick read, but it makes an impact. Beautiful lessons on friendship and kindness.
My favorite quote:“Why did you do all this for me?' 'I don't deserve it. I've never done anything for you.' You have been my friend,' replied Charlotte. 'That in itself is a tremendous thing.”At least Wilbur got that right!
GO CHARLOTTE! I was 10 almost 11 the summer I first read Charlotte's Web.Understanding life and death, the cycle of life, is never an easy experience. Since very little we hear about death and we learn about people and things being born, the two extremes of that cycle. But learning is not understanding.Later, we perhaps get a baby brother or sister, as it was for me, or the neighbor's cat has kittens and one of those kittens comes to live in our house, to be out four-legged companion.
And we start to unders I was 10 almost 11 the summer I first read Charlotte's Web.Understanding life and death, the cycle of life, is never an easy experience. Since very little we hear about death and we learn about people and things being born, the two extremes of that cycle.
But learning is not understanding.Later, we perhaps get a baby brother or sister, as it was for me, or the neighbor's cat has kittens and one of those kittens comes to live in our house, to be out four-legged companion. And we start to understand what being born means.And as life goes on, we see plants and insects died, sometimes under the soles of an adult's shoe or even our own. I could not stop myself from crying. I literally had tears in my eyes after I finished reading it.
Charlotte was such a sweetheart. And Wilbur's innocence made him look cuter.These lines made me breakdown: 'She was in a class by herself.
It is not often that someone comes along who is a true friend and a good writer. Charlotte was both.' One of the best stories of friendship I have ever read.Updated:I watched the movie today and it is one of the best movies ever made. I cried like a ba I could not stop myself from crying. I literally had tears in my eyes after I finished reading it. Charlotte was such a sweetheart.
And Wilbur's innocence made him look cuter.These lines made me breakdown: 'She was in a class by herself. It is not often that someone comes along who is a true friend and a good writer. Charlotte was both.' One of the best stories of friendship I have ever read.Updated:I watched the movie today and it is one of the best movies ever made. I cried like a baby at the end of the movie. The movie is probably as good as the book is.
It entered my all-time favourite movie list. I read this book three times and my opinion of the book has changed each time. The importance of this? Just think how complex and well written a book is if you can take different meanings from a novel at different stages of your life.Here is a mini recap of what I thought each time I read it.4th Grade: Poor piggy! I'm glad he found a nice spider friend. I'm so sad that Charlotte died at the end! But I still hate spiders.8th Grade: I guess it is a really good outlook on growing up.
I didn't I read this book three times and my opinion of the book has changed each time. The importance of this? Just think how complex and well written a book is if you can take different meanings from a novel at different stages of your life.Here is a mini recap of what I thought each time I read it.4th Grade: Poor piggy! I'm glad he found a nice spider friend. I'm so sad that Charlotte died at the end! But I still hate spiders.8th Grade: I guess it is a really good outlook on growing up. I didn't realize until now how Fern spends less and less time with Wilbur as she grows older until now.Junior in College: ARGH!
Why did I ever feel sorry for Wilbur? He's a cry baby! And poor Charlotte, always having to take care of whiny Wilbur.
I don't blame Fern at all for not caring about her pet pig. (Unfortunately, my dislike for the annoying pig prevents me from giving it a higher rating. I hear enough whining in life, I don't need to hear it from a pig.).Wanda’s Summer Carnival of Children’s Literature.I distinctly remember my grade one teacher, Doris Wright, reading Charlotte’s Web to us, a chapter or two per day. I suspect there was some snivelling when we reached the end of the tale.Boy, could I identify with the main human character, Fern. I grew up on a small farm like the ones in the book (without the work horses—we used tractors during my childhood) and it was primarily a hog farm.
I was very familiar with how sweet baby pigs are. In.Wanda’s Summer Carnival of Children’s Literature.I distinctly remember my grade one teacher, Doris Wright, reading Charlotte’s Web to us, a chapter or two per day. I suspect there was some snivelling when we reached the end of the tale.Boy, could I identify with the main human character, Fern. I grew up on a small farm like the ones in the book (without the work horses—we used tractors during my childhood) and it was primarily a hog farm. I was very familiar with how sweet baby pigs are. In fact, when children came to visit, my mom would assemble her camera and some old towels and we would head to the pig barn.
La Telarana De Charlotte
She would scoop up a piglet in a towel, hand it to a child, and photograph the proceedings. That cute little round snout on a piglet is irresistible to a child—we have many photos of kids kissing piglets right on the snout! Mostly, however, we didn’t spend much time getting to know the pigs—they would be leaving after they were weaned, sold on to farmers who would raise them to market weight. Not a good idea to get too attached.I also had a spider phobia as a child (which has thankfully subsided as I’ve aged) and I do remember Charlotte being an example that I told myself about, trying to convince myself that spiders were not the horrible creatures that I had imagined them to be.Like Fern, I spend many happy hours in the barn, watching chickens, pigs, cows and horses. In fact, when I was about 3, my uncle gave me some duck eggs and a Bantam hen to incubate them. She hatched four ducklings from the eggs (and was quite distressed when her charges went swimming in mud puddles) and those ducks lived for many years!
They would stand and quack at us when we were playing baseball if they wanted to cross the yard for some reason. When we paused the game, the ducks would quickly waddle across, as if they didn’t want to hold up play for very long.Farms have changed so much! Not just horses being replaced by tractors, but the mixed use family farm being lost in favour of large, single purpose farms. Wheat farms, chicken farms, intensive hog farms, cattle feed lots, etc.
Fewer children learn to milk cows, gather eggs, and weed gardens. I feel like mine was an idyllic childhood and I’m so glad I grew up when I did.Charlotte’s Web was a great exercise in nostalgia for me, remembering all those wonderful childhood details. Charlotte's Web is a tender children's story with sweet insights about life, growing up, and mortality. It's a privilege to open a book and hear the timber of a gifted writer, whose voice was so simple that one wonders why this book was not hatched decades earlier. The author's voice remains unique enough to be distinctive from the crowds of pretenders that have succeeded him. I think what I've done in my review is describe a classic.
Make no mistake, a classic Charlotte's Web is. The fact that Charlotte's Web is a tender children's story with sweet insights about life, growing up, and mortality. It's a privilege to open a book and hear the timber of a gifted writer, whose voice was so simple that one wonders why this book was not hatched decades earlier. The author's voice remains unique enough to be distinctive from the crowds of pretenders that have succeeded him. I think what I've done in my review is describe a classic. Make no mistake, a classic Charlotte's Web is. The fact that I like it, is mildly a catharsis for me.
One of the best books written for children that I've read so far this year.It has full of lessons that anyone including adults can learn from or at least be reminded of. It has many interesting characters that anyone can relate to. It's about life - the young pig Wilbur learning his life important lessons from the caring spider Charlotte.
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It's about friendship - Fern taking care of runt Wilbur, Charlotte weaving for Wilbur, rat doing favors for Wilbur and Charlotte, etc. Most importantly, it's a One of the best books written for children that I've read so far this year.It has full of lessons that anyone including adults can learn from or at least be reminded of. It has many interesting characters that anyone can relate to. It's about life - the young pig Wilbur learning his life important lessons from the caring spider Charlotte. It's about friendship - Fern taking care of runt Wilbur, Charlotte weaving for Wilbur, rat doing favors for Wilbur and Charlotte, etc.
Most importantly, it's about the passing of time - Charlotte dying at the end of story but leaving to Wilbur her sack of eggs containing her 514 children.It is simply written with illustrations and funny situations. However, if you reflect on each chapter, you would recall actual situations in your life similar to the events in the book. The passing of time message towards the end of the book is particularly heartwarming and will remind you one more time of your immortality and we are all just passing through. It is also not predictable; neither I had heard anything about it nor seen a movie based on the book prior before yesterday. Now, I am glad I picked it up yesterday morning and started reading.Antoine de Saint-Exupery's THE LITTLE PRINCE has just got a worthy companion in the Best Children's Book category in my list.
The only thing that makes THE LITTLE PRINCE a star higher is the fact that it has many clever quotes. The only one that I was able to catch from CHARLOTTE'S WEB is this: 'Life is always a rich and steady time when you are waiting for something to happen' which is not bad at all.Thanks, E. WHITE for a good book that children now and in many generations to come will definitely enjoy and pick some lessons from. Elwyn Brooks White was a leading American essayist, author, humorist, poet and literary stylist and author of such beloved children's classics as Charlotte's Web, Stuart Little, and The Trumpet of the Swan. He graduated from Cornell University in 1921 and, five or six years later, joined the staff of The New Yorker magazine.
He authored over seventeen books of prose and poetry and was elected to t Elwyn Brooks White was a leading American essayist, author, humorist, poet and literary stylist and author of such beloved children's classics as Charlotte's Web, Stuart Little, and The Trumpet of the Swan. He graduated from Cornell University in 1921 and, five or six years later, joined the staff of The New Yorker magazine.
He authored over seventeen books of prose and poetry and was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Letters in 1973.White always said that he found writing difficult and bad for one's disposition.Mr. White has won countless awards, including the 1971 National Medal for Literature and the Laura Ingalls Wilder Medal, which commended him for making “a substantial and lasting contribution to literature for children.”.
Download EBOOK La Telarana de Carlota PDF for freeCategory:The author of the book:Format files: PDF, EPUB, TXT, DOCXThe size of the: 16.83 MBLanguage: EnglishISBN-13: 403Edition: RayoDate of issue: 12 October 2006Description of the book 'La Telarana de Carlota':Estas son las palabras que se encuentran en la telarana de Carlota, en lo alto del establo. Su telarana expresa lo que ella siente por un cerdito llamado Wilbur, asi como los sentimientos de una ninallamada Fern. Quien tambien quiere a Wilbur. El amor de ambas ha sido compartido por millones de lectores.Reviews of the La Telarana de CarlotaUntil now in regards to the book we now have La Telarana de Carlota comments people never have nevertheless quit their review of the sport, or otherwise make out the print still.
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These kinds of assistance is likely to make us additional Combined!E B WhiteSadly, presently and we don't possess any specifics of the particular designer E B White. Nonetheless, we might take pleasure in should you have almost any information regarding the idea, and are also able to present the item. Deliver this to us! The ways to access every one of the check, and when every detail are correct, we'll distribute on our internet site. It is significant for individuals that each one correct concerning E B White.
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