Thursday, November 6, 2014

Dr. Seuss


Here it is my first children book blog. I am finally doing one because frankly I was stressed and good children book puts me to ease for remembering the good all times when we had recess, easy math and nap times. The children book I am blogging is actually a group of books of the same other I just decided to read (not for myself but to my younger siblings). Can you guess which author it is? It is the amazing, the rhyming doctor himself, Dr. Seuss.
 The ones I just read recently was the all-time favorite The Cat in the Hat, Fox in socks, The Foot book, that special Green eggs and Ham also Horton hears a Who, and finally and the first I have ever read it but I definitely have seen it as movie format The Lorax. I didn’t own and surprisingly couldn’t find how the Grinch stole Christmas but I think I have the movie so I am satisfied with that.
What so great about Dr. Seuss’s books is that the message in what they say in the books are simple but also are great advice for both children and adults alike.  These messages in the book were lessons for young children could also be used as lesson for adults as well. Some of the messages of the book are really memorable and were said in a way that will stick with us. Like that quote from the Lorax “Unless someone like you cares a whole awful lot, nothing is going to get better. It’s not”. That quote is easy to untangle because its basically saying if we want to change something we have to take stand and actually try to change. That kind of message is something is the kind of advice we should really remember when we are adults and want to take a greater part of shaping our lives. Other great messages in dr. sues is also in the Lorax is that we really need to protect our environment because this is the only home we have and if we don’t take of it then we may just lose it forever. Another one I distinctly remember is in Green Eggs and Ham when the that one grumpy creature finally admitted that he liked green eggs and ham it shows us that you try something before you judge it and in our society today we are really judgmental and we should really expand our views we might just like what we find out there.
So yes even if you are a grown adult you should remember the lessons you were taught in Dr. Seuss because they are great advice. But if you don’t remember than just refresh yourself with some Dr. Seuss books there great tools for learning great life lessons.

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