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Reading: Authors

Hans Christian Andersen's Childhood

 

            The old stories are the best stories. And often, the most beloved of children's stories are sweeter a few years down the road, the second time around.

 

The older child, approaching the teen years, is growing in depth of understanding, and benefits from increasingly-longer glimpses into the realities of adult life.

 

            Later grade school and the middle-school years are a great time to revisit children's classics, and this time, to go into more depth about the truths that they reveal.

 

            For example, did you know that the great children's author Hans Christian Andersen (1805-1875) had a very tragic childhood and youth? Yet he is credited with writing some of the greatest fairy tales of all time.

 

            Scroll down to see his long list of stories in chronological order. You can download and read most of them to your child:

 

http://hca.gilead.org.il/

 

 

            Andersen's self-concept was that he was an unattractive "geek." See his picture:

 

 

            Can you see how such a person might create the beloved story, "The Ugly Duckling"? That would be a good story to read to your child, and show this picture to talk about acceptance and real beauty.

 

            He grew up very poor: his father was a shoemaker and his mother was a washerwoman. His father died when Andersen was very young, leaving him at the mercy of others, and often hungry with few clothes against the cold Danish winter.

 

You can see how that poverty must have inspired "The Little Match-Seller," about the little street girl who fantasized what it would be like to be warm and fed each time she struck a match.

 

            Andersen's father had read to him constantly in an effort to equip him for higher learning and a better life, and fortunately, Andersen had a beautiful singing voice. A rich man paid his way to go to a special school where he could sing in a choir, and he had to be happy about that.

 

However, historians believe that the headmaster of that school abused Andersen, so there was a lot of pain mixed in with the opportunity. It is probable that this experience led to "The Nightingale," about the caged bird too sad to sing despite living in the opulence of the Chinese emperor's palace.

 

            The more you learn about Andersen's life, the more you can see it coming alive in his stories. As you and your child explore more authors, you will see how the old line is true - art imitates life!

 

            The 200th anniversary of Andersen's birth in Denmark was celebrated in 2005 - see the website, www.dr.dk/hca/en/forside

 

            By Susan Darst Williams www.AfterSchoolTreats.com Reading © 2010

 

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