Tono, the youngest of his brothers and sisters, is smalleven for a mouse. He is so small, in fact, that his mother won t let him go outside and play for fear that he ll hurt himself. One day, his... This description may be from another edition of this product.
The sword of Damocles is floating over my head (that ain't no crime!)
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 18 years ago
I rant on a periodic basis against children's books with "lessons" for kids. Soapboxes are all well and good, but they make lousy bedtimes stories, if you know what I mean. Go through the shelves of your local library and you'll eventually find some didactic tract (nine times out of ten written by a celebrity) that is trying to teach kids this lesson or that lesson with varying degrees of success. Phooey to that, says I. But what about the picture book that contains a subtle, understated, sly little message, not for children, but for their parents instead? It's a rare occurrence, just once in a blue moon really, but if it's done well it's worth taking note of. "Cottonball Colin" comes to you directly from the loony team of Brits responsible for such books as Misery Moo and the infamous Tadpole's Promise. Now they've produced a book that has a sweetness and a style that is bound to be beloved. Yeah, it has a message all right. But with packaging this nice, and writing this good, "Cottonball Colin" is the exception that proves the rule. Colin would probably be described as the runt of his litter. When it comes to comparing him to his nine brothers and sisters, Colin is clearly the smallest mouse of them all. Worried that he isn't as tough as the others, Colin's mother overprotects and babies the little mouse, preventing him from ever involving himself in what she might deem a "dangerous" situation. One day, the perfect solution presents itself. What if she wrapped Colin up entirely in cotton? Looking like nothing so much as a fluffy white sphere, the little mouse promptly gets thrown and chased about, all because of his bright white, easy to spot, covering. And you know what? He is absolutely fine. As a result, little Colin goes off all the time, and though bad things do sometimes happen, it's definitely worth it in the end. What I love about this book is that it sets up a pretty clear message without pandering to its audience. Colin is so overprotected by his mother that this very protection is what actually causes him the most harm by the end of the story. Think about it. If she hadn't wrapped him in cotton then he wouldn't have been mistaken for a snowball, a piece of delicious bread, or a fat white rabbit. In fact, if she had just treated him like the rest of his siblings he would have had his life threatened significantly less often. That's what I mean about making a book with a message for the parents rather than the kids. Essentially this story is saying, "Hey, folks! Overprotect your offspring and watch them succumb to the evils of the world MUCH FASTER than if you'd merely let them take their lumps along the way." Which, in this paranoid age, is a message I can certainly get behind. The book has something else going for it as well. I got two words for you: Graduation Gift. It's that golden genre of picture book that some publishers would kill to get a piece of. If you establish a book as an ideal inspirati
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