Current:Home > reviews'Love You Forever' is being called 'unsettling'. These kids books are just as questionable -EquityExchange
'Love You Forever' is being called 'unsettling'. These kids books are just as questionable
View
Date:2025-04-18 18:20:09
One Facebook user recently roasted “Love You Forever,” inciting a firestorm of comments from people who love the book to others who have changed their minds after rereading as adults.
"When her son grows up, the mother drives across town and sneaks into his house when it’s dark to sing to him and rock him," Marlene Kern Fischer, a New York mother, blogger and author posted about "Love You Forever." "Does no one else find this incredibly unsettling?"
This got us thinking: What other classic children’s books have head-scratching messages?
Below are our picks. Some of these don’t stand the test of time, others teach our kids questionable lessons, and some are just plain creepy. From “The Giving Tree” to “Curious George” and “Where the Wild Things Are,” here are the kids' books we can’t look at the same anymore.
‘The Giving Tree’
At its core, this is the story of a selfish child who becomes a selfish man and takes everything from Mother Nature (a female). Does he feel any remorse at the end? It’s debatable. He returns to spend time with the once-thriving tree he’s reduced to a withering stump, but it’s unclear if he ever grasps the role he’s played in her demise. And why is she happy at the end? What does that message send to our children? To our daughters? It’s long been argued this is a story of generosity, an important value to teach children. But somehow at the end, this man is still using this tree for all she’s got, and she’s happy about it – happy for his attention. It doesn’t hold up in 2024.
Check out: USA TODAY's weekly Best-selling Booklist
‘Where the Wild Things Are’
A lot has changed since Maurice Sendak published this book in 1963, including how we feed our kids and talk about food. This book has timeless illustrations and was even made into a subpar movie, but the entrance into Max’s magical monster-filled world is via a massive temper tantrum, for which he is punished in the form of being sent to his room without dinner. Studies have since shown using food as a punishment – or reward – can disrupt the formation of healthy eating habits. The book ends when a hungry Max realizes he is ultimately being allowed to eat his supper, alone in his room. It’s a hard plot point to work around if you are subscribed to the modern takes on feeding and disciplining kids.
‘The Rainbow Fish’
People who love the book about “the most beautiful fish in the entire ocean” removing its unique scales and handing them out to sea creatures is a lesson against vanity and in favor of caring.
But flip the point of view, and it becomes a cautionary tale about having to give up what makes you special – what literally makes you sparkle in this case – to make others like you. When the entitled Little Blue Fish doesn’t get a scale (“You have so many,” he whines), he rallies all the sea creatures to shun the Rainbow Fish so they “turned away when he swam by.” This is bullying, kids. The Rainbow Fish’s loneliness spurs him to take off his beautiful scales so the others can wear them. Great, let’s all be mediocre. It’s not until he’s just like everyone else that he’s supposedly happy. But why should the Rainbow Fish be friends with creatures whose acceptance is based on what he can give them? The answer is he shouldn’t.
‘Curious George’
The first “Curious George” book starts with George in Africa. And a page in, the man with the yellow hat says, “What a nice monkey. I would like to take him home with me.”
Let’s just say even children will now see this as a bad idea – even without colonialism. Is the man a poacher? Was the man vetted? It is harder to adopt a dog than apparently take a monkey across continents. When the two later seem to become friends, does George have Stockholm Syndrome? We get that the idea is supposed to be a funny, curious monkey who gets into mischief. But who thought it was a good idea to leave George in a firehouse where he later ends up in jail, or to run a newspaper route? The monkey is adorable, and the man in the yellow hat makes an easy and popular Halloween costume, but there are so many better books than this children’s “classic” by H.A. and Margaret Rey. No, we don’t want to cancel George, but maybe give him a rest to expand your children’s library with better books.
veryGood! (1)
Related
- Meta releases AI model to enhance Metaverse experience
- 'Actions of a coward': California man arrested in killings of wife, baby, in-laws
- New York’s top court allows ‘equal rights’ amendment to appear on November ballot
- Paul Skenes makes All-Star pitch: Seven no-hit innings, 11 strikeouts cap dominant first half
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- Dollar General agrees to pay $12 million fine to settle alleged workplace safety violations
- AT&T 2022 security breach hits nearly all cellular customers and landline accounts with contact
- The GOP platform calls for ‘universal school choice.’ What would that mean for students?
- The 401(k) millionaires club keeps growing. We'll tell you how to join.
- Project 2025 would overhaul the U.S. tax system. Here's how it could impact you.
Ranking
- South Korea's acting president moves to reassure allies, calm markets after Yoon impeachment
- For at least a decade Quinault Nation has tried to escape the rising Pacific. Time is running out
- Gary Ginstling surprisingly quits as New York Philharmonic CEO after 1 year
- Steward Health Care under federal investigation for fraud and corruption, sources tell CBS News
- DeepSeek: Did a little known Chinese startup cause a 'Sputnik moment' for AI?
- Miracle dog found alive over 40 feet down in Virginia cave, lured out by salami
- The Esports World Cup, with millions at stake, is underway: Schedule, how to watch
- 2 teenage suspects arrested in series of shootings across Charlotte, North Carolina
Recommendation
Travis Hunter, the 2
Theater festivals offer to give up their grants if DeSantis restores funding for Florida arts groups
Vermonters pummeled by floods exactly 1 year apart begin another cleanup
For Nicolas Cage, making a serial killer horror movie was a healing experience
NHL in ASL returns, delivering American Sign Language analysis for Deaf community at Winter Classic
Backers of ballot initiative to preserve right to abortions in Montana sue over signature rules
Yes, seaweed is good for you – but you shouldn't eat too much. Why?
Drive a used car? Check your airbag. NHTSA warns against faulty inflators after 3 deaths