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Should you or your little ones have not read any of Dr. Seuss' books

By: Michael Farring


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Little ones may well not know his actual name, but they know what they like. And what they like is Dr. Seuss. The story of Dr. Seuss, whose actual name was Theodor Geisel, is an fascinating one. The impact he had on books for young children is an enduring one. On March 2, school little ones across United States and beyond celebrate Dr. Seuss' birthday, with skits, birthday cakes, and reading from his books.

Theodor Geisel was born in 1904 in Springfield, Massachusetts. He graduated from Dartmouth College in 1925, but rather than earning a doctorate in literature at Oxford University as he originally intended, he returned on the United States in 1927. During the next 2 decades he worked for quite a few magazines, worked in advertising, and served in the army during Globe War II. He was stationed in Hollywood and won Oscars for his jobs on war documentaries.

By that time, Geisel (as Dr. Seuss) had already written quite a few children's books, and he continued to accomplish so. His very first children's picture book, And to Think That I Saw It on Mulberry Street was published in 1937. Dr. Seuss once said, "Children want the exact same elements we want. To laugh, to become challenged, to become entertained, and delighted." Dr. Seuss' books surely offer that for children. His witty rhymes, engaging plots, and imaginative characters add as much as fun for little ones and adults alike.

It was his publisher who very first involved Geisel in making entertaining children's books with a limited vocabulary for beginning readers. In May perhaps 1954, Life magazine published a report about illiteracy between school children. Between the causes cited by the report was the fact that young children were bored by the books that were out there at the commencing reader level. His publisher sent Geisel a list of 400 words and challenged him to arrive up having a book that would use about 250 with the words. Geisel utilized 236 from the words for your Cat during the Hat, and it was an instant success.

The Dr. Seuss books definitively proved that it was possible to produce engaging books using a limited vocabulary after the author/illustrator had each imagination and wit. The plots from the Dr. Seuss books are entertaining and always teach a lesson, from the importance of taking responsibility to your earth and 1 one more to learning what's really important. With their quirky characters and clever rhymes, the Dr. Seuss books are good to read aloud.

Books by Thoedor Geisel for young readers continue to be popular for independent reading. In addition to those written as Dr. Seuss, Geisel also wrote various begining readers under the pseudonym Theodore Lesieg (Geisel spelled backwards). These include The Eye Book, Ten Apples Up on Top, and Quite a few Mice of Mr. Price. Although Theodor Geisel died at the age of 87 on September 24, 1991, his books and Dr. Seuss and Theodore Lesieg did not. They continue to become well-known as do books "in the variety of" the original Dr. Seuss.

If you or your little ones have not read any of Dr. Seuss' books, you will be in for a treat. I particularly recommend The Cat during the Hat, The Cat during the Hat Comes Back, Green Eggs and Ham, Horton Hatches the Egg, Horton Hears a Who!, That the Grinch Stole Christmas, The Lorax, And To Believe that I Saw It on Mulberry Street, The 500 Hats of Bartholomew Cubbins, and Oh, the Places You will Go. For additional about these books, see my Dr. Seuss

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