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Classics For Kids on Christmas Holidays
- By Melanie Smith
- Published 04/10/2009
- Short Stories
- Unrated
Melanie Smith
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Reading should always be an integral part of growing up. It should always start in the home and parents should provide them with optimism to continue enhancing their reading and comprehension skills even until they are already grown up. It is only in this way that they discover the significance of reading which they can carry on and pass on to their own children and grandchildren.
This Christmas holiday, it is best to start introducing classic stories to your children and point out moral lessons and insights which they can use as tools in the world they are living in. Here are a few popular classics that you may want to start introducing to your children on Christmas holiday.
Gulliver’s Travel
Jonathan Swift’s “Gulliver’s Travel” is one of the most famous classic of English literature. It was originally titled “Travels into Several Remote Nations of the World,” which narrates the whereabouts of Lemuel Gulliver, a surgeon which later on turned into a ship captain. It was first published in 1726 and revised in 1735. The book became very popular as soon as it was published.
Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
Mark Twain’s “Adventures of Huckleberry Finn” is categorized by modern critics and scholars as one of America’s best works of art. Originally published in the United States in 1885, the book became an instant best-seller as soon as it came out. Last January 2007, Time Magazine ranked the book fifth place in their 10 Greatest Books of All Time. The story relates the adventures of “Huck” and his rapport with Jim, a runaway slave. The two runaway north on the Mississippi River using only a raft and came across several adventures along the way that made them closer.
The Swiss Family Robinson
The Swiss Family Robinson was written by a Swiss pastor named Johann David Wyss. It was first published in 1812. The story tells of a Swiss family who got stranded in the East Indies while on their way to Port Jackson, Australia. The book has the father describing the experience of his family of six from the time they got shipwrecked to surviving life in an isolated island somewhere near New Guinea. The family consists of an intellectual father, his wife who has outstanding cooking skills and four active sons. While struggling for survival on the island for more than 10 years until they were rescued, the family members demonstrated inventiveness and toughness and built their own house.
A Christmas Carol
Charles Dickens’ “A Christmas Carol” was first printed in 1843 and became an instant hit selling out six thousand copies in a week. Dickens initially wrote the book to be able to pay off a debt but amazingly, it ended up being one of the most well-known and lasting Christmas stories of all time. A Christmas Carol is a story of integrity about an old and harsh miser by the name of Ebenezer Scrooge. Working as a financier and money-changer, he always wanted to build up his money and doesn’t care other things such as friendship, love and the Christmas season. Nonetheless, he was made to comprehend life’s value other than capital in just one evening making him to at last change his life and become more giving, and sympathetic. In the end, he also learned to respect Christmas with all his heart.
This Christmas holiday, it is best to start introducing classic stories to your children and point out moral lessons and insights which they can use as tools in the world they are living in. Here are a few popular classics that you may want to start introducing to your children on Christmas holiday.
Gulliver’s Travel
Jonathan Swift’s “Gulliver’s Travel” is one of the most famous classic of English literature. It was originally titled “Travels into Several Remote Nations of the World,” which narrates the whereabouts of Lemuel Gulliver, a surgeon which later on turned into a ship captain. It was first published in 1726 and revised in 1735. The book became very popular as soon as it was published.
Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
Mark Twain’s “Adventures of Huckleberry Finn” is categorized by modern critics and scholars as one of America’s best works of art. Originally published in the United States in 1885, the book became an instant best-seller as soon as it came out. Last January 2007, Time Magazine ranked the book fifth place in their 10 Greatest Books of All Time. The story relates the adventures of “Huck” and his rapport with Jim, a runaway slave. The two runaway north on the Mississippi River using only a raft and came across several adventures along the way that made them closer.
The Swiss Family Robinson
The Swiss Family Robinson was written by a Swiss pastor named Johann David Wyss. It was first published in 1812. The story tells of a Swiss family who got stranded in the East Indies while on their way to Port Jackson, Australia. The book has the father describing the experience of his family of six from the time they got shipwrecked to surviving life in an isolated island somewhere near New Guinea. The family consists of an intellectual father, his wife who has outstanding cooking skills and four active sons. While struggling for survival on the island for more than 10 years until they were rescued, the family members demonstrated inventiveness and toughness and built their own house.
A Christmas Carol
Charles Dickens’ “A Christmas Carol” was first printed in 1843 and became an instant hit selling out six thousand copies in a week. Dickens initially wrote the book to be able to pay off a debt but amazingly, it ended up being one of the most well-known and lasting Christmas stories of all time. A Christmas Carol is a story of integrity about an old and harsh miser by the name of Ebenezer Scrooge. Working as a financier and money-changer, he always wanted to build up his money and doesn’t care other things such as friendship, love and the Christmas season. Nonetheless, he was made to comprehend life’s value other than capital in just one evening making him to at last change his life and become more giving, and sympathetic. In the end, he also learned to respect Christmas with all his heart.
