Tag Archives: children

the little prince — antoine de saint-exupèry

2 stars

Orig­i­nally it’s a children’s book, but it is also read­able for adults.

The I in the story is stranded with his plane in an African dessert, where he meets the lit­tle prince. This lit­tle guy has been hop­ping from planet to planet and from star to star to get the answers to his ques­tions. Every per­son on each planet/star sym­bol­izes an aspect of the adult world, the cul­ture and soci­ety we live in. There is for exam­ple the king who wants to rule every­thing, the busi­ness­man who counts the stars and wants to own them to gain from them. This are only two exam­ples of the seven peo­ple he meets, but they all are part of the world we as grown humans live in. The lit­tle prince and with him the chil­dren who read this book have to learn how this world works. For the adults who read this story it’s time to reflect and ponder.

harry potter and the order of the phoenix — j.k. rowling

3 stars

This is the fifth book in the famous and by now clas­sic story of Harry Pot­ter the teenage wiz­ard. “He-who-must-not-be-named” is back now for only a lit­tle while and the world already isn’t the same any­more. Peo­ple fight a lot, Hog­warts is taken over by the Min­istry of Magic (which is not a good thing), Harry Pot­ter is being por­trayed as a liar and last but not least “the order of the Phoenix” is being formed again after almost 16 years. So much for a quiet year.

i capture the castle — dodie smith

3 stars

A nice lit­tle story told in jour­nal form. Cas­san­dra is the one who is telling the story about her life and love(s).

She lives in a cas­tle where also live: her strange father, step­mother Topaz, sis­ter Rose, brother Thomas and help Stephen. When the fam­ily of which they rent the cas­tle, comes to Eng­land (from the USA) the story really sets of. Two young men, Simon and Neil, belong to that fam­ily and steal the harts of Rose and Cas­san­dra with whom Stephen is hope­lessly in love.