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Charlotte's Web

Charlotte's Web

List Price: $25.00
Your Price: $17.50
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Tawny Rector's Great Review Of Charlots Web
Review: Charlots Web is a very good book. The reason why I think it is a
really good is that this pig named wilber was going to be killed
because he was a runt. But a girl named Fran saved him from death.
Fran took Wilber and treated him just like a little baby. She also took good care of him. It is really nice to know that someone cares that much about a animal.Thats what I found most interesting.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Charlotte's Web
Review: Charlotte's Web is a great book I think.I've read this book twice.It is kind of a sad story.The book is mainly about a pig named Wilber.He has friend named Charlottes.She is a spider that basicly tells him about life.I recomend you to check this book out cause it is a really great book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Aswesome Book
Review: This book was very good it kept me going and I never wanted to stop reading! I was very happy that I picked this book to read. A lot of my friends read this book, and they said it was great, so then I wanted to go find it and read it and they were right it is a great book! It can be sad at parts but in a another way it is a great book!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Aswesome Book
Review: This book was very good it kept me going and I never wanted to stop reading! I was very happy that I picked this book to read. A lot of my friends read this book and they said it was great so then I wanted to go find it and read it and they were right it is a great book! It can be sad at parts but in a another way it is a great book!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Lovable pig + wise spider = enduring classic
Review: "Charlotte's Web," by E.B. White, belongs to a special class of literature: a children's book which has much to offer to older teen and adult readers. White's wonderful story is superbly complemented by the charming illustrations of Garth Williams.

As the story opens, eight year old farm girl Fern Arable stops her father from killing a piglet who has been labeled the runt of the litter. The little pig, whom Fern names Wilbur, becomes one of the central figures in the story. Eventually he will be befriended by Charlotte, the wise and loving spider mentioned in the book's title.

White creates a sort of modern animal fable in which his barnyard characters can speak both with each other and with Fern. White's barn is populated with some truly marvelous characters. Special mention should be made of Templeton the rat. Gluttonous, sneaky, often nasty, but curiously sympathetic, Templeton is one of the great anti-heroes in modern literature.

Part of this novel's brilliance is the fact that the author makes a heroine out of a spider: a creature that many people probably regard with fear. Unlike a cute piglet or other barnyard creatures, a spider is a creature vastly different from humans. White's Charlotte is a truly remarkable character. White's witty, compassionate prose style is an ideal vehicle for telling the story of Charlotte and her friends.

"Charlotte's Web" is a masterful blend of whimsy, humor, gentle satire, and life-and-death drama. But above all, it is a powerful story of friendship. Deeply moving and superbly written, this is a book which, I believe, will endure as a treasured classic.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A CLASSIC!
Review: After watching the "Charlotte's Web" movie I am glad I also read the book. Some people have only seen the film, but have not read the story. I suggest they do!

"Charlotte's Web" is an easy read for most youngsters. The chapters are short and will keep a child's attention. I think kids will have fun watching the movie and also reading the book to see the similarities and differences.

Books are a great gift for young readers, particularly when many kids have too much television in their lives. Child readers usually do better in school and their adult lives.

Most people have talents they don't know they have. My exposure to literature caused me to discover a talent in writing I didn't know I had. My talent in writing for children gives me hours of fun and a great feeling of accomplishment. Do you have a talent you don't know you have? YOU probably do!

As a children's book author, I highly recommend "Charlotte's Web" to kids and grown-ups.

Richard W. Carlson Jr., author of "Jeremy Grabowski's Crazy Summer in Stormville!"

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Charlotts Web
Review: My opinion about the book "Charlotte's Web" is good. I think it teaches you about friendship and how you can help your friend. I think it teaches you how a friend wants to be treated. I like that they used talking animals for most of the characters. I liked the book because it was funny and exciting. It gets your attention with the animals that can talk. I think that the author wanted everyone to know that friends mean a lot in your life. That's why I like the book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: beautiful
Review: Natural History

The spider, dropping down from twig,
Unwinds a thread of her devising:
A thin, premeditated rig
To use in rising.

And all the journey down through space,
In cool decent, and loyal-hearted,
She builds a ladder to the place
From which she started.

Thus I, gone forth, as spiders do,
In spider's web a truth discerning,
Attach one silken strand to you
For my returning.

E. B. White, November 1929

As the poem Natural History, written some 23 years before Charlotte's Web indicates, EB White had a long fascination with spiders and their webs and the truth to be discerned in them. In fact, he was enamored of the natural world in general and his desire to be closer to the land led him to move to a Maine farm in 1939. It was in the farm life and specifically in the comfort of the barn that the inspiration for this children's classic came to him :

As for Charlotte's Web, I like animals and my barn is a very pleasant place to be, at all hours. One
day when I was on my way to feed the pig, I began feeling sorry for the pig because, like most
pigs, he was doomed to die. This made me sad. So I started thinking of ways to save a pig's life. I
had been watching a big grey spider at her work and was impressed by how clever she was at
weaving. Gradually I worked the spider into the story that you know, a story of friendship and
salvation on a farm.

From these humble beginnings he wove an enduring tale of love and loyalty, life and death, and, perhaps unnoticed by most of us until adulthood, of the comic ingenuousness of man, and of the value of knowledge and a big vocabulary.

White, renowned as an essayist, wrote so clearly and fluidly that the pages whiz by. And if you get a chance to listen to the audio version that he reads himself, it is the performance of a master storyteller. Though a native New Yorker (Mt. Vernon anyway), White had by then picked up the rhythm and accents of a New Englander. In addition, he tells the story with apparent affection for his creations, love of the barnyard, and amusement at the goings on.

I was trying to figure out what made it all so magical and then I found this quote in which he described his own work (What Am I Saying To My Readers He ?, May 14, 1961, NY Times) :

What am I saying to my readers? Well, I never know. Writing to me is not an exercise in addressing
readers, it is more as though I were talking to myself while shaving. My foray into the field of
children's literature was an accident, and although I do not mean to suggest that I spun my two
yarns in perfect innocence and that I did not set about writing "Charlotte's Web" deliberately,
nevertheless, the thing started innocently enough, and I kept on because I found it was fun. It also
became rewarding in other ways--and that was a surprise, as I am not essentially a storyteller and
was taking a holiday from my regular work.

All that I ever hope to say in books is that I love the world. I guess you can find that in there, if
you dig around. Animals are part of my world and I try to report them faithfully and with respect.

He succeeded quite brilliantly in the task he set himself. I know of no work of literature by any author that better expresses respect for animals and love for the world.

GRADE : A+

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Excellent Book
Review: Charlotte's Web is about a young girl named Fern who becomes friends with the animals on her uncle's farm. She becomes very good friends with a little pig named Wilbur, who is going to be slaughtered.

Wilbur soon becomes friends with a spider named Charlotte who starts writing words into her web about Wilbur to try and save his life.

This was an excellent book and I recommend it to everyone who loves animals.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Read it even if you don't have children.
Review: One of the best reasons for having children is having an excuse to read Charlotte's Web. I just finished reading it to my youngest child, and cried just as hard as a did when I first read it to her brother a decade ago.

The story is about a spider who saves a pig from being turned into bacon and pork chops by weaving words to describe him into her web, convincing everyone that a miracle has occurred, and that there must be something very special about this pig.

Charlotte, the spider, is kind, noble, and brave ' a model of perfect friendship. Wilbur, the pig, is childlike and innocent at the beginning, but he grows wiser under Charlotte's influence throughout the book. The book is beautifully written in simple, graceful language. It's just a pleasure to read from beginning to end.

There is one thing that anyone planning to read the book to a young child ought to know. At the end, after laying her eggs, Charlotte dies. I had actually forgotten about that when I started reading the book to my 6-year-old recently, and when, halfway through the book, I remembered, I was a little worried about what her reaction would be. But as I got closer and closer to Charlotte's death, I realized how skillfully E.B. White handled the scene. For a couple of chapters before, you see Charlotte growing weaker and weaker. My daughter kept moving closer to me, sensing, I'm sure, that something was wrong. Charlotte's death doesn't come as a shock. Even a kindergartner seemed to sense that it was coming. More important, in the scene after Charlotte dies, Wilbur guards her eggs until her babies are born, and while most of them fly away, three baby spiders stay behind and become his friends. He's able to guide them the way Charlotte guided him, which gives a wonderful sense of continuity.

I don't think Charlotte's death is a reason not to read the book to a child, but I think if you're planning to read it to a child under 8 or so, you should read it to yourself first to be sure your child is ready for it.


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