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Heroes of Greek Mythology (Dover Storybooks for Children)

Charles Kingsley

Heroes of Greek Mythology (Dover Storybooks for Children) Charles Kingsley Amazon Price: $8.95
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Subjects -> Children's Books -> Authors & Illustrators, A-Z -> ( K ) -> Kingsley, Charles

Editorial Review:

The inspiring adventures and deeds of three great heroes spring to vivid life. One of the Victorian age's most brilliant storytellers recounts Perseus' quest to slay the Medusa; Jason and the Argonauts' search for the Golden Fleece; and Theseus' encounter with the deadly Minotaur. 60 illustrations.

The Water-Babies

Charles Kingsley

The Water-Babies Charles Kingsley Amazon Price: $15.25
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Subjects -> Literature & Fiction -> General -> Classics

Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 20 Average rating: 4.5 of 5

New unabridged edition forthcoming 5 out of 5 stars.
6 of 7 people found this review helpful.

I would like to point out that in 2008 Broadview Press will publish my unabridged edition of The Water-Babies with the original illustrations by Linley Sambourne. There will be a substantial introduction to the work as well as works by Lewis Carroll, Kingsley himself, and other contemporary writers that help place Kingsley's work in context.

http://www.broadviewpress.com/product.php?productid=912&cat=0&page=1

Transformation and redemption 4 out of 5 stars.
0 of 0 people found this review helpful.

This is a classic British "children's" story and is more for adults or older children. It was written in the 1860's. It's a charming look at the transformation of a dirty chimney sweep into a clean 4" water-baby, but on a higher plane also a look at the death of children during this Industrial Revolution time period. Beware: some of the author's prejudices come out in this book especially when it comes to the Irish which he represents as dishonest and magical. There is also an abridged version, and if you use this book with children, you might want to use the abridged version or explain these things to them. If you are an adult, you should read the unabridged version. Charles Kingsley had a good time writing this book!

Editorial Review:

When Tom, an ill-treated little chimney-sweep, jumps into a clear, cool stream to clean himself something magical happens; he is turned into a tiny water baby by the fairies. He enters a strange, magical underwater world, and travels beyond the world's end to the other end-of-nowhere, getting into all sorts of scrapes and encountering creatures beautiful and frightening along the way. He also learns many important lessons - it is a voyage of discovery that Tom will never forget.

Madam How and Lady Why: First Lessons in Earth Lore for Children

Charles Kingsley

Madam How and Lady Why: First Lessons in Earth Lore for Children Charles Kingsley Amazon Price: $9.99
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Subjects -> Children's Books -> Animals -> Nonfiction
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Editorial Review:

Madam How and Lady Why: First Lessons in Earth Lore for Children is a classic book written by author Charles Kingsley. This title has long been a popular juvenile work dealing with natural phenomenon and gives them an excellent understanding and education related to geologic and earth knowledge. This is an excellent book for children as well as those interested in the writings of Charles Kingsley.

The Water-Babies

Charles Kingsley

The Water-Babies Charles Kingsley Amazon Price: $11.99
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Subjects -> Children's Books -> Authors & Illustrators, A-Z -> ( K ) -> Kingsley, Charles

Westward Ho! or, the Voyages and Adventures of Sir Amyas Leigh, Knight, of Burrough, in the County of Devon~ in the Reign of Her Most Glorious Majesty Queen Elizabeth (Scribner's Illustrated Classics)

Charles Kingsley

Westward Ho! or, the Voyages and Adventures of Sir Amyas Leigh, Knight, of Burrough, in the County of Devon~ in the Reign of Her Most Glorious Majesty Queen Elizabeth (Scribner's Illustrated Classics) Charles Kingsley List Price: $26.95
By: Atheneum
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Subjects -> Children's Books -> Literature -> Action & Adventure

Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 7 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

An enormously popular novelist during his time. 4 out of 5 stars.
6 of 7 people found this review helpful.

Kingsley was extremely popular during his lifetime in the nineteenth century, but his works have somewhat fallen into obscurity now. He is well worth taking up again. His books are deeply embedded in the Victorian way of life, so he is very much a writer for his own time. Kingsley wrote quite a few books, but "Westward Ho!" has always been his most popular. It is a story of adventure on the high seas and beyond. The book starts in England, but his hero, Amyas Leigh is a sailor, and the book covers his trip to the West Indies and South America. Amyas meets many unique people and experiences many adventures before he finds himself back on "Jolly Old's" shores. Although a bit preachy, the story is pretty good and certainly kept my interest.

Victorian high seas adventure novel 5 out of 5 stars.
6 of 8 people found this review helpful.

A great period novel for boys, girls, moms and dads. It was very popular in decades past and is at least as much fun as, say, Treasure Island or Tarzan. Although this book takes place in the Elizabethan period and was written in the Victorian era, some Catholic reviewers below seem to feel that the novel lacks a 21st century sanitized viewpoint about Catholicism/Spanish imperialism. I've heard the same sort of argument made regarding the stereotype of Jim in Huckleberry Finn. Similarly in cowboy movies the Indians are usually portrayed as the bad guys (we now know, of course, that this is simplistic at best); likewise, the Spaniards in this book are the bad guys. It shouldn't be too tough to infer that all Catholics aren't bad, unless one is a simpleton. My family is Catholic and we all love the book. This is a fine adventure for young adults that is so much better than the product on most bookshelves today. The wonderful N. C. Wyeth illustrated edition is the one to get.

Editorial Review:

The magnificent paintings of N. C. Wyeth complement an action-packed saga of romance and seafaring adventure set against the dramatic backdrop of Elizabethan England, the battle of the Spanish Armada, and the exploration of North America.

The Heroes, or Greek Fairy Tales for My Children

Charles Kingsley

The Heroes, or Greek Fairy Tales for My Children Charles Kingsley By: Macmillan
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Water-Babies, The

Charles Kingsley

Water-Babies, The Charles Kingsley Amazon Price: $12.99
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 3 Average rating: 3.5 of 5

Excellent, but beware of the nasty parts 4 out of 5 stars.
19 of 19 people found this review helpful.

This book is 98% brilliant, and well worth reading more than once; but if you give it to a youngster to read, you'll definitely want to go over certain parts with him or her and explain that, as lovable and compassionate as Kingsley seems to have been overall, nobody's perfect.

Think Gulliver's Travels: a fantastical journey full of adventures and characters that all represent something in real life, thus conveying Kingsley's attitudes about child labor, the golden rule, profanity, life after death, treatment of the poor, English superiority, American arrogance (playful jabs), Roman Catholicism (irreverent pokes) and the Irish (more about that later).

The main character is a ten-year-old chimney sweep named Tom who works for an abusive master. While working at a nobleman's house, Tom climbs down the wrong chimney and finds himself in a lavishly furnished room where a beautiful - and very clean - girl is sleeping. On seeing himself in a mirror for the first time, he suddenly realizes how dirty he is, and starts to cry (and this sad scene may well cause the reader to do the same), waking the little girl and setting off a big ruckus. Thinking Tom is trying to rob them, the servants chase him, and he ends up wandering far from home. Delirious with fever, he decides to wash himself in a stream, where he "falls asleep," sheds his human body, and is turned into a water baby. He then goes on to have a series of fantastic adventures to complete his neglected moral education and prepare him for heaven.

Parts of the story are heartbreaking in ways children may not understand, which may be just as well. After Tom falls asleep in the water, Kingsley writes,

"Tom, when he woke, for of course he woke - children always wake after they have slept exactly as long as is good for them -"

There are many similar kinds of passages in which, by describing things as they ought to be, Kingsley expresses his deep sadness over the way they really are, and his longing for a world in which, among other things, no one ever overworks, beats or bullies children. If you have a heart, you will cry.

Because Kingsley sets himself up as a moral guide for children (his narrator assumes the reader is an upper class English boy), it's only fair to look not only at the quality of the story and writing, which are top-notch, but at the moral values he's trying to teach. Most of what he has to say is sensible by today's standards. Oh, how one wants to love him unreservedly! In many ways he was ahead of his time, passionately opposed to child labor, and to the harsh corporal punishment of children that was common in his day. He seems to have had a relatively compassionate vision of Heaven and Hell, in which people receive their just deserts but are never, ever beyond hope of redemption. At the same time, he never lets you forget he's an English gentleman, and likes giving advice on what hour to rise before a day spent hunting on one's extensive grounds, and warning readers against the terrible evil of poaching on another man's land.

Naturally he was a product of his times, and some political incorrectness is to be expected. He uses terms like "rich as a Jew," compares a seal's face to that of a bald "negro," likes taking little shots at the Welsh, Catholics, Americans, and so forth. For the most part it's the kind of thing you can roll your eyes at and continue to enjoy the story. But what he has to say about the Irish is different, and I'm surprised to hear it wasn't removed from the abridged version.

When I first read this book, I fell in love with Kingsley right away. He seemed, above all else, compassionate. That's why it was so disappointing when I came across the hateful anti-Irish sections. What an about-face! The Irish, or "Paddies," are described as untrustworthy, stupid, servile gorillas with "coarse lips" who bring about their own extinction by being too shiftless to care for themselves properly. In the end, there's only one gorilla left, and he's shot by a good Englishman. Mind you, this was written not twenty years after the potato famine had wiped out over a million Irish. Of course anyone who's done any reading on the subject knows why so many Irish relied on potatoes for their subsistence, and about the system that forced so many to live from hand to mouth. Apparently Kingsley's compassion did not extend even to Irish children, whose hunger-swollen bellies he describes almost mockingly, gloatingly. Whew! Very nasty stuff.

Conclusion: Buy it, read it with open eyes, enjoy it overall, tsk tsk over the bad parts, and forgive Kingsley for being an imperfect, well-meaning human being who lived in England in the 19th century.

Editorial Review:

The adventures of Tom, a sooty little chimney sweep with a great longing to be clean, who is stolen by fairies and turned into a water baby.

Madam How and Lady Why (Yesterday's Classics)

Charles Kingsley

Madam How and Lady Why (Yesterday's Classics) Charles Kingsley Amazon Price: $12.95
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Editorial Review:

Introduces children to geology through conversations about earthquakes, volcanoes, coral reefs, and so on. Encourages children to wonder about the distinctive features of the landscape about them and how they came to be that way. Suitable for ages 10 to 14.

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