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The Great Big Treasury of Beatrix Potter par…
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The Great Big Treasury of Beatrix Potter (édition 1992)

par Beatrix Potter (Auteur)

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A collection of tales featuring Peter Rabbit and his friends.
Membre:GrinningCat
Titre:The Great Big Treasury of Beatrix Potter
Auteurs:Beatrix Potter (Auteur)
Info:Derrydale (1992), 256 pages
Collections:Votre bibliothèque, Read, Lus mais non possédés
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Mots-clés:animals, children, 19th century, british, public domain

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The Great Big Treasury of Beatrix Potter par Beatrix Potter

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» Voir aussi les 2 mentions

4 sur 4
Convenient collection of many Beatrix Potter tales, including some less well known selections. It is not comprehensive, and lays out the text and illustration of multiple pages on one page, making for less of a surprise in the action sometimes. ( )
  KSchellVT | May 26, 2022 |
his delightful volume combines three popular Beatrix Potter collections: Giant Treasury of Peter Rabbit, Giant Treasury of Beatrix Potter and Further Adventures of Peter Rabbit and His Friends. Nineteen tales in all with Potter's original illustrations. 520 full-color and 155 b&w illustrations. 256 pages. ( )
  LynneQuan | Oct 3, 2017 |
This is my childhood in a book. It will be something I read to my children and grandchildren and hopefully they to their's. ( )
  Bcushman | Aug 19, 2014 |
I'm sure I'm not the only person who has been inspired to revisit Beatrix Potter's books through the recent film made about her life, Miss Potter. I grew up with various copies of her books, small and distinctive in their white binding, and cropping up everywhere in the house. Though I, with a child's clearsighted practicality, preferred fatter books with more words because they kept me occupied longer, every now and then I would gather as many Potter books as I could find and read them. I savored the books' small size, thick glossy pages, and expressive illustrations.

One of the reasons these books have aged so well is their sly humor. So much is implied: Peter not enjoying himself in Mr. McGregor's garden the second time around; Jemima Puddle-duck marveling at the number of feathers in the fox's shed; Mrs Tabitha Twitchit refusing to give credit at her store. In some ways the spare, flexible narrative style educates young readers to read between the lines and understand what isn't explicit. Just as in Austen, it's just as much about what isn't said as what is. The animal characters interact with one another quite like people do, with little social hypocrisies (that we can see and giggle at), children disobeying their mothers, neighbors being jealous of one another — scolding, singing, teasing, chasing, joking, playing, eating, living.

And the watercolors! They are at once very prim and proper in the style of Victorian manners, and yet so suggestive of action, excitement, mischief, and fun. Potter's stories may be very short, but half the tale is told by the pictures.

One thing that surprised me as I reread the stories as an adult is how honest they are about the possibility of death (by being eaten, mostly!). In The Tale of Mr Tod, baby bunnies are stolen and are only rescued from the fox's clutches at the last minute. In The Tale of Tom Kitten, the two rats roll up Tom into a doughy ball preparatory to devouring him. Jemima is rescued from the fox by the dog Kep, but the puppies rush in and gobble the eggs she was sitting on. Potter's little animal world may be quaint and charming, but it isn't sentimental.

The rhymes and poems remind me of J. R. R. Tolkien at his most childlike; I think of Tom Bombadil always breaking into nonsensical rhymes, always in a good humor. It must be a British thing in children's books to have characters who communicate in poetry and riddles.

Beatrix Potter's books, with their disarming simplicity and beautiful illustrations, are simply a treasure and I look forward to sharing them with my own children someday. Highly recommended! ( )
4 voter atimco | Mar 7, 2011 |
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A collection of tales featuring Peter Rabbit and his friends.

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