funstm
Written on Feb 8, 2022
Pippi Longstocking is the type of child that would drive a parent mad. And most adults. Any child that answers the question of 'why are you walking backwards?' with 'don't we live in a free country? Can't a person walk any way she likes? - is the type of child that would drive most adults mad.
On the other hand, she's probably also the type of child most other children love. With her red plaited pigtails and vibrant outlook on life she is a colourful icon and a fun and interesting character to enjoy.
I liked parts of this, other parts just baffled me. It probably doesn't help reading this as an adult. I find a lot of things these days fly straight over my head that my niece and nephew think is hysterical. Or I don't have a sense of humour. One of the two. I have no doubt most kids will love it though.
Whether or not you want to take the chance that the kid your reading to will revolt, I guess depends on whether or not they're your child or you can hand them back - or if they're old enough to read it themselves.
One thing that did strike me though - the guns. This is the second book in as many days to have children carrying pistols. The other was Christopher Robin from Winnie-the-Pooh. I mean, I know - different eras and all but jeez. Although at least Pippi is a bit older, I'm not sure Christopher Robin is even four. The idea of my four year old niece with a gun is terrifying. And I know Pippi says "Never let children carry guns" and that but was it necessary to include it at all?
Still interesting book. 3.5 stars for target audience.