Volume 04, Number 08
Kids
The thing I miss most about the UK is...
From the Children at the British Embassy compound
Eve Freeman (5): English sweets (especially Cadbury’s Chocolate Buttons), CBeebies (children’s programs on the BBC).
Lucy Cairns (6): Playing in grandma’s garden and picking her flowers, cooking programs on the television (especially the ones for children).
Liam Johnson (13): speaking English, access to information/instructions in English—not being able to understand Japanese websites and order forms, English newspapers.
Ben Ord-Smith (10: Candyfloss on sticks, pick-and-mix from Woolworths, being able to speak in English in shops, Sunday morning walks in the wood, and then lunch in the pub beer garden, wildlife.
Seb Ord-Smith (8): Family, fossil hunting on the beach, picking blackberries off the bushes, seeing horses in the fields and being able to pat them when they stick their heads over the fence, hearing lots of birds in the garden.
Eleanor Chelton (8): Riding Granny’s horse, the countryside, being able to read the advertising, English fashion, the peace and quiet of the countryside, picking fruit in the garden.
Annie Johnson (10): Festivals, like English Christmases, finding my way around easily.
BOOK REVIEW
The UK’s Contribution to Children’s Literature
By Ken Cooney
Are you aware that many of our beloved children’s books originate from the UK? Perhaps you are aware and perhaps you aren’t. Let’s have a look at some of the UK’s well known books that many of us, from all over the world, grew up with!
Do you remember the Mr. Men And Little Miss series by Roger Hargreaves? You know, Mr. Happy, Mr. Bump, Little Miss Sunshine (not related to the recent movie), Little Miss Chatterbox and so on? It was a huge success right off the bat and has continued to remain popular in many places, including here in Japan, where kids often use the series as a tool to learn English.
The Mr. Men series was started in 1971 and the first Little Miss was published in 1981. So, can you name the first Mr. Men character that was created? The answer is: Mr. Tickle. He was created in response to Roger Hargreaves’s son asking him what a tickle looks like. Well, that certainly is a difficult question to answer, and many of us would have quite a difficult time answering such a profound question, but not Mr. Hargreaves! He drew a silly looking orange man with long wiggly arms that tickle, and thus began the entire Mr. Men and Little Miss series.
Another famous character began with the help of a son, Winnie the Pooh. That’s right, A.A. Milne created his beloved Pooh after a toy bear that his son, Christopher Robin, owned. In fact, many of A.A. Milne’s characters were based on toys that his son played with, and he even used his son for the little boy in the stories, Christopher Robin! But why was the bear called Pooh? Well, if one reads the introduction of Winnie the Pooh, Milne explains that Christopher Robin had met a swan named Pooh, and took a liking to its name. When leaving the swan, Christopher took the name with him, thinking that the swan did not want it anymore. He then gave the name to Edward Bear (a Winnipeg bear), who had wanted an exciting name, and thus Winnie the Pooh began.
Last but not least, we have Peter Rabbit, created by Beatrix Potter in 1902. Peter Rabbit, another anthropomorphized character like Winnie the Pooh, wears human clothes and speaks, and just like humans, gets in to trouble, along with his sisters, Flopsy, Mopsy, and Cottontail. Beatrix Potter originally wrote the Tale of Peter Rabbit for her own amusement, but because it was such an adorable story, her friends urged her to publish the work, and now we still have Peter Rabbit more than 100 years later! So there you have it: The most notable children’s books the UK has offered not only in Japan but to children all over the world.