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Does the drawing below frighten you?
Frighten? Why should anyone be frightened by a hat? 29%  29%  [ 11 ]
Frighten? Why should anyone be frightened by a hat? 29%  29%  [ 11 ]
Oh, no, it's a...! !! 21%  21%  [ 8 ]
Oh, no, it's a...! !! 21%  21%  [ 8 ]
Total votes : 38

magic
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06 Jan 2006, 3:04 pm

Image

If you selected the first poll option that means you are a sensible person. Otherwise you can read on...

I would like to share the joy that I had reading "The Little Prince" by Antoine de Saint Exupéry. I had read it the first time maybe 20 years ago - it was a required reading at school, one of very few that I liked. Yesterday I again embarked with the little prince on a journey from one asteroid to another, and then to strange planet Earth.

The book is very poetic, even dream-like, and in the same time light, fresh and full of humor. I liked the first half, author's introduction and little prince's space journey, more than the lyrical second half. Also I must note some scientific inaccuracies. For example, prince's home is sometimes referred to as an asteroid, and sometimes as a planet or a star. But in general I hold book's science in a high regard. Did you know that the biggest danger to the asteroids are baobabs?! :D Author's imagination is amazing beyond words!

"The Little Prince" is a well-known classic, but if you haven't read it (or if you want to do it once more), here is a link to the full text: http://www.angelfire.com/hi/littleprince/frames.html. Note that this site lacks some of the images (that are an integral part of the book).



BeeBee
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06 Jan 2006, 4:03 pm

ah, The Little Prince. I haven't read it in ages.

I remember it made me sad for I am a very sensible person who wishes they were not.

It is sad not to believe in magic.



vetivert
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06 Jan 2006, 4:12 pm

absolutely, BeeBee.

i love the little prince. and it's not a hat, it's a...

ooooooh, just stopped myself in time from giving it away! :oops:

what's "sensible" mean?



alex
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06 Jan 2006, 4:17 pm

Its weird france they used to put a children's author on their money. Shows how different the United States is from France.

Roald Dahl would never be on a 5 dollar bill :roll:


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pad
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06 Jan 2006, 4:35 pm

I've unfortunately never read it before.



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06 Jan 2006, 6:17 pm

An aunt gave me The Little Prince when I was very young. I suppose I was around eight years old. Accompanying the book was a handwritten note from her, telling me that if I read the book it would change me forever.

That scared the hell out of me! I was scared to death to read it; I didn’t want to be changed. I hid the book away; I didn’t even want to see it on my bookshelf.

So, I never read it.

Even now, some thirty years later, I often think about the gift of that book and my frightened reaction to my aunt’s note. I remember reading the note while holding the book in my hand, running to my room with it, throwing it in the back of my closet, and throwing toys on top of it.



SolaCatella
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06 Jan 2006, 6:34 pm

I liked it when I read it in fourth grade (I borrowed it off a friend's bookshelf while sleeping at her house when she wasn't looking and finished it). Borrowed it from the library and quickly got bored with it last week, though.



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08 Jan 2006, 1:11 pm

There is a musical version of that if anyone cares...



Neuroman
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08 Jan 2006, 1:19 pm

am i the only other one who knows (without having read the story recently) that that is not a hat?


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pyraxis
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08 Jan 2006, 2:02 pm

I know what it is... but it's only been a few years since I read the book.



Serissa
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08 Jan 2006, 5:59 pm

synchro wrote:
An aunt gave me The Little Prince when I was very young. I suppose I was around eight years old. Accompanying the book was a handwritten note from her, telling me that if I read the book it would change me forever.

That scared the hell out of me! I was scared to death to read it; I didn’t want to be changed. I hid the book away; I didn’t even want to see it on my bookshelf.

So, I never read it.

Even now, some thirty years later, I often think about the gift of that book and my frightened reaction to my aunt’s note. I remember reading the note while holding the book in my hand, running to my room with it, throwing it in the back of my closet, and throwing toys on top of it.


I do hope you see the humor in that. :P It's sad though, because it's such a good book!



Cade
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09 Jan 2006, 12:57 am

I remember not "getting" this book as a kid. I reread it again as an adult, but found it doesn't do much for me. I feel the same way for other "magical surealism" books like The Alchemist that are the big rage right now.

I am very mystical in nature, and drawn to mysticism and mystery. Books like the Cloud of Unknowing and The Practice of the Presence of God ar a couple of my all time favorites. But I do not have the same feelings or attraction to magic (aside from Harry Potter or LOTR - bit those are each another story). To me mystcism and mystery do not require you to abandon reason - only to acknowledge its limitations. Magic on the other hand requires you to forsake reason. I suppose that's great for some, but I just find it fanciful yet lacking real substance that I as a very rational person by nature can take to heart.



synchro
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09 Jan 2006, 1:20 am

Serissa wrote:
I do hope you see the humor in that. :P It's sad though, because it's such a good book!


It is funny...even more so since I'm still fighting change. As an adult (if I am an adult) however, I feel I can read the book safely.

It isn't that I don't appreciate literature that induces change. It's just that when it comes to change, I have to be looking for it intentionally. Someone else giving me something intending to change me is akin to casting spells.

That is what it felt like when I received the book...my aunt was trying to use magic against me! I treated the book like it was cursed!



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09 Jan 2006, 4:57 am

I never read the story when I was younger, but I asked for it last Christmas and my parents got me a nice hardcover copy. It is a very nice story, calming, whimsical, and something I can relate to in a number of ways.

It helps, of course, that I love children's books. But this is far from the typical children's book, in my opinion.



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09 Jan 2006, 2:57 pm

BeeBee wrote:
ah, The Little Prince. I haven't read it in ages.

I remember it made me sad for I am a very sensible person who wishes they were not.

It is sad not to believe in magic.


Yeah. Funny how that works. I lost my belief in any form of magic several years ago, and ever since have been trying and wishing with all my heart to get it back. :/ Life just seems so... cold and unimportant without it.

I should get ahold of The Little Prince and re-read it. I haven't read it in so many years that all I remember about it is that the prince lives on a little moon/asteroid thingy.



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27 May 2006, 8:15 pm

I just read it now. It is a great book.


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