Archive for the ‘Conceptual: 8 and up’ Category

Songs: Men don’t buy pajamas for pistol-packing mamas, and other hard lessons I’ve learned from Broadway musicals

Tuesday, May 30th, 2006

Tell your friends about this blog entry
Tell friends about this blog entry

Books etc. / For children 5 and under / For children 5 and up / For children 8 and up / Learning to read / For children 12 and up / Sophisticated readers / Fat books (Deep books for sophisticated but young readers) / About educators educating / Technical Books / Gifted Education / Books whose protagonists are gifted, intellectually / All book reviews


Caution: This piece includes spoilers. If you don’t want to learn much about the plot of Annie Get Your Gun, please don’t read on.

About 11 years ago, desperate for a distraction for my then-4 yr. old daughter, I sat her down in front of a TV, popped a tape of Carousel into the VCR and walked away. When I stopped by to check up on her 45 minutes later, I found her facing the screen, tears streaming down her face. It was then I should have
realized that musicals’ pretty costumes and music often disguise powerful messages.

Years later, I found myself in the video rental store on my birthday. The plan was to eat a festive dinner and watch a video of my choosing.  “Old musicals are always safe,” I thought, addled by the aging process. I brought home the 1950 screen adaptation of Annie Get Your Gun, starring Betty Hutton and Howard Keel.

Annie Get Your Gun tells the story of Annie Oakley, best shot in the West, in music and lyrics by Irving Berlin. Much-loved songs from the show include Doin’ What Comes Natur’lly, The Girl That I Marry, I Got The Sun In The Morning,
Anything You Can Do, and There’s No Business Like Show Business.

Annie Oakley sings the theme of musical loud and clear in the brilliant lyrics of You Can’t Get A Man With A Gun, which include:

… When I’m with a pistol
I sparkle like a crystal,
Yes, I shine like the morning sun.
But I lose all my luster
When with a Bronco Buster.
Oh you can’t get a man with a gun.

While Frank Butler, the man Annie aspires to wed, sings:

The girl that I marry will have to be
As soft and as pink as a nursery

The girl I call my own
Will wear satin and laces and smell of cologne


A doll I can carry,
The girl that I marry must be.

There we sat, the daughter (by now a teenager) who cried through Carousel, younger daughter about 6, parents, and even the cat watched, rapt, as the music traced Annie Oakely’s life. Annie evolves from an ignorant hillbilly (Doin’ What Comes Naturly) whose shooting must be sharp if she is to feed her family, into the most talented and renowned sharpshooter in the world. Which threatens to destroy her romantic relationship with the second-most talented sharpshooter in the world, Frank Butler. So after watching for nearly two hours, the lesson my daughters learn is that in order to catch and keep the man she loves, a talented, beautiful, intelligent young woman does best to convince him that she’s just not as good a shot as he is.

Which is why, several days later, I was not thrilled to observe my usually-retiring young one scale to the top of a pile of bags of manure outside our drug store and unabashedly belt out multiple choruses of There’s no business
like show business
to the amazed and delighted stares of our fellow-patrons.  “That’s alright,” I told myself,  “these people have no idea that this song, which has no doubt delighted millions, is from a reactionary musical that delivers a negative message about the need for girls to scale back their ambitions and hide their talents in order to succeed in the world.”

My feelings of failure as a parent worsened when my young daughter became infatuated with a CD of the Broadway revival of Annie Get Your Gun starring Bernadette Peters. Not only is the message of the show in this very recent production unimproved — and how could it be, it’s deeply embedded in the book? — but the performance by Peters is a real disappointment. Her hillybilly accent goes in and out and is embarrassingly influenced by Brooklynese.

Thank goodness my daughter was most interested in the funny competition song, Anything You Can Do, which Annie (at a point in the story where she is still mercifully unaware that a woman’s place is second to the man’s) sings with her rival/intended, Frank Butler:

Anything you can do,

I can do better.
I can do anything
Better than you.

Since dear daughter objects to “mushy love songs”, she (and I) were mostly able to avoid Annie’s decision to permanently hide her gifts. Unfortunately, You can’t get a man with a gun is such a funny but direct description of the thought process that leads to Annie’s capitulation that it proved impossible to ignore. I hate the meaning in the following words, but I just adore the word play:

A man’s love is mighty
It’ll leave him buy a nightie
For a gal who he thinks is fun.

But they don’t buy pajamas
For pistol packin’ mamas,
And you can’t get a hug

From a mug with a slug,
Oh you can’t get a man with a gun.

Anyone who rode in our car listened to this song over and over again until our local librarians finally compelled us to return the CD.

We’re now on to You’re a Good Man, Charlie Brown, Joseph and the Technicolor Dreamcoat and Weird Al Yankovic. The music and lyrics aren’t as fantastic, but at least the messages are slightly more positive, for girls at least.

The lessons I hope I’ve learned from this experience are:

  • Musicals do pack a punch. The songs that make them compelling also project their messages to impressionable children.
  • Children do listen, hear, and, worst, understand these messages. Stephen Soundheim told us this in Into the Woods. But I had forgotten.

Happy listening.

–Emily

If you’re going to watch Annie Get Your Gun, get the DVD or VHS video of the 1950 movie. The CD of Bernadette Peter’s performance is certainly interesting, but the Ethel Merman version’s the one I recommend.

Carousel, on the other hand, is gorgeous, if depressing. There’s a VHS version but the DVD is not much more expensive.


Rants and reviews table of contents / Into the Woods / Annie Get Your Gun / Learning to Build and Program Robots / Stomp / The Armadillo Dance

Book review: The Egypt Game

Friday, May 26th, 2006

Tell your friends about this blog entry
Tell friends about this blog entry
Author:Zilpha Keatly Snyder
Reading Level (Conceptual):Children 8 and up
Reading Level (Vocabulary):Children 8 and up
Genre:fiction, magic
Year of publication:1967

Realistic adventures of some children who think hard about their make-believe. The plot does involve a series of child murders, but these are not described in any detail.
Similar books

If you found this review helpful and/or interesting, consider supporting our book habit: Buy this book!: Egypt Game

Book review: Dragonfly

Tuesday, May 23rd, 2006

Tell your friends about this blog entry
Tell friends about this blog entry
Author:Alice McLerran
Reading Level (Conceptual):Children 8 and up
Reading Level (Vocabulary):Children 8 and up
Genre:fiction
Year of publication:2000

Smoothly told tale of a group of people who band together to raise a dragon. Confronts the reality of "scientists who would intervene" without making them out to be evil.

Contrasts nicely with Song of the Gargoyle

-- Emily Berk

If you found this review helpful and/or interesting, consider supporting our book habit: Buy this book!: Dragonfly

Book review: Dealing With Dragons

Friday, May 19th, 2006

Tell your friends about this blog entry
Tell friends about this blog entry
Author:Patricia C. Wrede
Reading Level (Conceptual):Children 8 and up
Reading Level (Vocabulary):Children 8 and up
Genre:fiction, dragons, fairy tale
Year of publication:1990

Highly politically correct fractured fairy tale about a princess who fashions a full life for herself even though she doesn't conform to the fairy tale standards for princesses.

My daughter was very amused at the way the author alludes to fairy tale conventions and plots.
Similar books

If you found this review helpful and/or interesting, consider supporting our book habit: Buy this book!: Dealing With Dragons

Book review: Dear Mr. Henshaw

Thursday, May 18th, 2006

Tell your friends about this blog entry
Tell friends about this blog entry
Author:Beverly Cleary
Reading Level (Conceptual):Children 8 and up
Reading Level (Vocabulary):Children 8 and up
Genre:fiction
Year of publication:1983

A boy who aspires to become a writer learns about being a writer by writing to one.
My ten year old daughter felt somewhat cheated by the author's technique of presenting all the letters to Mr. Henshaw and none of the letters from him. I, on the other hand, think Cleary moves the plot along quite nicely in this way. When, in the middle of the book, the correspondence shifts to being in a diary rather than an exchange of letters, my daughter responded much more positively.

Anyway, we both got into the story of Leigh Botts, son of a newly-divorced trucker and a catering assistant.

Wishing all those reluctant or aspiring writers out there their own Mr. Henshaw!



-- Emily Berk

If you found this review helpful and/or interesting, consider supporting our book habit: Buy this book!: Dear Mr. Henshaw

Book review: The Lightning Thief

Saturday, May 13th, 2006

Tell your friends about this blog entry
Tell friends about this blog entry

Book review: The Thief Lord

Saturday, May 13th, 2006

Tell your friends about this blog entry
Tell friends about this blog entry

Book review: Dragon Rider

Saturday, May 13th, 2006

Tell your friends about this blog entry
Tell friends about this blog entry
Author:Cornelia Funke
Reading Level (Conceptual):Children 8 and up
Reading Level (Vocabulary):Children 8 and up
Genre:fiction
Year of publication:2004

Lovely, gentle story about a community of fantastical creatures and a few humans who adventure together to discover a place in which to build a new life together.

One of the many delights:
The brownie named Sorrel lives to eat mushrooms. But when she doesn't like someone and calls him or her names, Sorrel uses the names of poisonous mushrooms as epithets. SO CUTE!!!


We have come to believe that anything Cornelia Funke writes might be enjoyable reading. But Dragon Rider might just be our favorite of Funke's books. It has no where near the stress level of others, particularly the Ink... books. But you should read them all. (Well, maybe it should be your kid who is seen getting them out of the library.)

See also:


If you found this review helpful and/or interesting, consider supporting our book habit: Buy this book!: Dragon Rider

Book review: My Side of the Mountain

Saturday, April 15th, 2006

Tell your friends about this blog entry
Tell friends about this blog entry
Author:Jean Craighead  George
Reading Level (Conceptual):Children 8 and up
Reading Level (Vocabulary):Children 8 and up
Genre:fiction
Year of publication:1959

reviewed by Jennifer Dees

I've just finished reading one of my old favorites to my daughter, and it occurs to me that it's a very good book for homeschooled kids. The book is "My Side of the Mountain", by Jean Craighead George (1959). I vividly remember that I cherished this book at about 8 or 9 years old, little pioneer girl that I was. We lived "out in the country", with woods bordering our 10 acres, and I spent many a happy hour out in the woods, in my own world, imagining myself an adventurer from some time past, probably as a male protagonist (they had all the fun; the feminist revolution hadn't hit our small town yet).

My daughter's well into chapter books but this one's a little long and deep for her, but when I saw it in the library I couldn't wait. I read a lot to her when I can find a break in her own reading. I knew this was one we would enjoy together, and we did.


The boy in it is the oldest of 9 kids who live with their parents in a crowded New York City apartment. He dreams of living on his own in the woods. Some land is still in their family from a great grandfather, in the Catskill Mountains, northwest of New York. He tells his father he wants to run away and live on his own, and his father, not really believing him, tells him to go ahead.

He heads for great grandfather's land, arrives in the Catskills in May, and begins to learn how to live off the land. He carves a home for himself inside a huge, ancient hemlock tree. He fishes in streams and makes fires with a flint and steel. He learns which roots taste good, makes walnut and acorn flour from the nuts, and so on. When hunters poach on his land, he hides the downed deer they lose sight of under branches and then he makes clothes from the deer hide and smokes the venison. As far-fetched as it may sound, the transformation of this city boy to one who can live off the land, with no adults, is very believable.

He hikes into town and researches things he needs to know in the local library. He swipes a baby falcon from a nest and with the aid of falconry books from the library, raises and trains the falcon to hunt for them both.

My daughter and I both loved this independent learner, so close to the earth, and understood when the only thing that brought him back into the "real world", over a year later, was loneliness and a need to be with other people. Yet we were sad along with him for his loss of the true wilderness experience.

The book I have says it's for "Ages 10-14" but my advanced 6-year-old loved hearing this read aloud to her.

-- Jennifer Dees

Jennifer Dees is a member of the San Francisco Homeschoolers support group
Similar books

If you found this review helpful and/or interesting, consider supporting our book habit: Buy this book!: My Side of the Mountain

reviewed by Jennifer Dees

I’ve just finished reading one of my old favorites to my daughter, and it occurs to me that it’s a very good book for homeschooled kids. The book is *My Side of the Mountain,* by Jean Craighead George (1959). I vividly remember that I cherished this book at about 8 or 9 years old, little pioneer girl that I was. We lived \”out in the country,\” with woods bordering our 10 acres, and I spent many a happy hour out in the woods, in my own world, imagining myself an adventurer from some time past, probably as a male protagonist (they had all the fun; the feminist revolution hadn’t hit our small town yet).

My daughter’s well into chapter books but this one’s a little long and deep for her… but when I saw it in the library I couldn’t wait. I read a lot to her when I can find a break in her own reading. I knew this was one we would enjoy together, and we did.

The boy in it is the oldest of 9 kids who live with their parents in a crowded New York City apartment. He dreams of living on his own in the woods. Some land is still in their family from a great grandfather, in the Catskill Mountains, northwest of New York. He tells his father he wants to run away and live on his own, and his father, not really believing him, tells him to go ahead.

He heads for great grandfather’s land, arrives in the Catskills in May, and begins to learn how to live off the land. He carves a home for himself inside a huge, ancient hemlock tree. He fishes in streams and makes fires with a flint and steel. He learns which roots taste good, makes walnut and acorn flour from the nuts, and so on. When hunters poach on his land, he hides the downed deer they lose sight of under branches and then he makes clothes from the deer hide and smokes the venison. As far-fetched as it may sound, the transformation of this city boy to one who can live off the land, with no adults, is very believable.

He hikes into town and researches things he needs to know in the local library. He swipes a baby falcon from a nest and with the aid of falconry books from the library, raises and trains the falcon to hunt for them both.

My daughter and I both loved this independent learner, so close to the earth, and understood when the only thing that brought him back into the \”real world,\” over a year later, was loneliness and a need to be with other people… yet we were sad along with him for his loss of the true wilderness experience.

The book I have says it’s for \”Ages 10-14\” but my advanced 6-year-old loved hearing this read aloud to her.

— Jennifer Dees
Jennifer Dees is a member of the San Francisco Homeschoolers support group,

Book review: Linnea in Monet’s Garden

Monday, April 3rd, 2006

Tell your friends about this blog entry
Tell friends about this blog entry
Author:Cristina Bjork
Illustrator:Lena Anderson
Reading Level (Conceptual):Children 8 and up
Reading Level (Vocabulary):Children 8 and up
Genre:fiction, historical/art
Year of publication:1987

Young girl visits the places Monet lived and learns about how he translated his life into his paintings.

(This is technically fiction, but the fiction provides lots of information about Monet and about how an artist lives and works.)
Similar books

If you found this review helpful and/or interesting, consider supporting our book habit: Buy this book!: Linnea in Monet's Garden