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Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: i will memorize every word. first forward than backwards Review: i will begin with "the elephant and the butterfly," and then will work on "The Old Man Who Said 'Why?'"one day before i die...
Rating: ![4 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-4-0.gif) Summary: Charming. Review: The dedication of this volume tells us that Cummings wrote these tales for his daughter when she was a very little girl. But even if it hadn't, any reader would have known. As you read, it's as if you can hear a parent telling the stories to his child over a sleepy bedtime. The stories have an effortless feeling as if they are being spoken rather than written. This free and easy quality combined with the spectacularly imaginative subjects make for a really fun reading experience. Unless you have a really patient child, however, I wouldn't recommend this edition for sit-on-the-lap reading. The illustrations aren't particularly engaging. Rather, I would let your kids sit down with some blank paper and a box of crayons and ask them to draw their own pictures while you read out loud to them. Or read to them at bedtime when their eyes are closed. These are the kinds of stories to be savored by the senses rather than "follow-along-while-I-read."
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: Surprisingly Edward Estlin, or not? Review: These fairy tales are beautifully nonsensical and touching to even those who are less than sentimental. They are precious, without any reservation using such a word. Each was evidently written with a careful, loving authorship and a sense of humor that without a doubt is the creative quirkiness of the poet Edward Estlin Cummings. If you know the poet, the tender, innocent personalness of these tales might even surprise you, or, at least, bring you closer to him and his writings.
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