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carriedoodledoo's review against another edition
4.0
A very fun book of nursery rhymes I'd love to giggle over with my children.
libraryrobin's review against another edition
3.0
Dark humor rhymes (in somewhat antiquated language) and pen-and-ink illustrations.
Exactly what I anticipated from this pair. I especially enjoyed the rhyming introduction, written by the author.
Exactly what I anticipated from this pair. I especially enjoyed the rhyming introduction, written by the author.
charlie_x's review against another edition
3.0
The tales are fun and morbid, and I think kids would still like them these days. I remember loving the TV show with a similar theme, Grizzly Tales for Gruesome Kids, as a child and that showed all sorts of terrible things happening to people.
My copy also contained The Moral Alphabet, which was less enjoyable than the tales.
My copy also contained The Moral Alphabet, which was less enjoyable than the tales.
nicktomjoe's review against another edition
4.0
I’m really reviewing an earlier edition with the Bentley illustrations, a 1977 reprint of the 1940 ‘album edition.’
There is a deeply subversive element to these that reminds me sharply of the Saki “unsuitable story” where conventional morality is looked at with a cynical eye: the little girl who fails to pay attention to a “beware of the bull” sign - and meets a bull, which “confirmed in her instinctive guess that literature breeds distress;” or that Oxford “serves to make a kind of Fold or Pen wherein to herd a lot of Learned Men.” Funny, with a ponderous tone that adds to the delight, they are perhaps dated for the modern reader, but still contain joys such as “Maria Who Made Faces and a Deplorable Marriage.” Bizarre topsy-turvy of over-moralistic children’s lit:
“Just you work for Humanity, never you mind
If Humanity seems to have left you behind.”
There is a deeply subversive element to these that reminds me sharply of the Saki “unsuitable story” where conventional morality is looked at with a cynical eye: the little girl who fails to pay attention to a “beware of the bull” sign - and meets a bull, which “confirmed in her instinctive guess that literature breeds distress;” or that Oxford “serves to make a kind of Fold or Pen wherein to herd a lot of Learned Men.” Funny, with a ponderous tone that adds to the delight, they are perhaps dated for the modern reader, but still contain joys such as “Maria Who Made Faces and a Deplorable Marriage.” Bizarre topsy-turvy of over-moralistic children’s lit:
“Just you work for Humanity, never you mind
If Humanity seems to have left you behind.”
summerashley's review against another edition
A collection of tales that dive into the mind of a child and demonstrate what happens to naughty children. A more relevant version that is comparable to books such as Struwwelpeter.
yetilibrary's review against another edition
4.0
Read it for the illustrations (I know that doesn’t make sense). Gorey was the perfect choice to illustrate this collection, and his art elevates Belloc’s verse.
thesaltiestlibrarian's review against another edition
dark
funny
medium-paced
- Plot- or character-driven? N/A
- Strong character development? N/A
- Loveable characters? It's complicated
- Diverse cast of characters? N/A
- Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes
3.0
ettegoom's review against another edition
4.0
Yay! My favourite illustrator, mixed with hilarious poems by Hillaire Belloc!