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December 2nd, 2008 - we have 234 poets, 8,023 poems and 17,807 comments.
Books The Giving Tree


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Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - great message!!
Also donated to a local charity--they are collecting books for a holiday raffle this year...
It is one of childrens' favorites!



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - not so controversial actually......
i'm a child psychology major. anyone who says this is bad for a child is obviously reading way too much into the book, and does not realize children are not capable of doing the same. this is actually a very good book for children. shame on you people and your awful thoughts.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Its a great book, with a great philosophy. Read between the lines.
The moral of the story is touching, its a great gift to give a parent.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Embarassing Parenthood
I just read The Giving Tree by Shel Silverstein for the first time. Now, I do remember having the book read to me at the public library when I was little, and I am pretty sure it was featured in Reading Rainbow, so the story is not new to me. However, since this is the first time I ever read the story on the other side of parenthood, I was surprised by my overwhelming emotional reaction to the book. I read it as a bedtime story to my two lovely girls and I wept for the brief interval of time where I can help form them as young Christian ladies.

More surprising to me than my emotional response, was how I understand the Tree much better now. As a child, I guess I pitied the tree and sympathized with the boy. I simply expected that the Tree enjoyed helping the boy so the Tree was happy. Now I know that the Tree did enjoy helping the boy, but that the Tree suffered as the boy grew since the boy grew further away. I guess The Giving Tree taught me the lesson of love which I only absorb intellectually from the tree of the cross. Successful love, like successful parenting, involves suffering. The better I do my job of raising my daughters into mature, independent ladies, the more I will miss these years of providing everything for them.

Reprinted with permission from http://naturalfamilylife.blogspot.com



Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - A boy and a tree?
Really, I believe this is a fantastic piece of work and a tribute to the genius that is Shel Silverstien. But I also always have to wonder about the ambiguous message of the story and is truly meant. There is so much contraction. Clearly the tree represents love, but she completely gives of herself entirely for so little. The debate is indeed the charm, though.


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