'The Giving Tree': Tender Story of Unconditional Love or Disturbing Tale of Selfishness... - 6 views
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A passionate and very vocal minority of reviewers on sites like Amazon and Goodreads seems to find the story an affront not just to literature but to humanity itself.
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kaylanholt on 05 Oct 14People were obviously offended by the book and thought it was inappropriate.
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Betsey Stevenson, the economist and Obama administration appointee, reads the book to her children and says it creates a space
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“The Giving Tree” is not a children’s book like the useful, humble classic “Hands Are Not for Hitting.”
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I love Silverstein’s profoundly playful stuff so much more than “The Giving Tree,” but I like playfulness in general best, because I can take it more seriously.
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The boy uses the tree as a plaything, lives off her like a parasite, and then, when she’s a shell of her former self and no longer serves any real purpose, he sits on her — which makes her happy?
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(O.K., maybe I’m exaggerating a bit, but you get the idea.)”
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I like how the person writing this article gives off her sense of humor periodically through out it which makes it relatable to the reader considering we have all exaggerated at at least one point in our lives. It gives the writer credibility.
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I agree with that comment. The writer makes it easier to relate to what point they are trying to get across and can more likely get readers to agree.
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Silverstein would have made it funny, if that was what it was meant to be.
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Mess with the meter of humor, and it’s immediately obvious something is misrepresented.
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“The Giving Tree” as a model for how a woman (or anyone) should be is like saying that same soldier sets an example.
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When I read the book again these 30-some years later, my only brief reservation — that it should somehow have been funny, that funny might have saved it from its destiny of weird co-optings — faded.