Synopsis
If
readers are to come to Shakespeare and to Chekhov, to
Henry James and to Jane Austen, then they are best prepared
if they have read Lewis Carroll and Edward Lear, Robert
Louis Stevenson and Rudyard Kipling," writes Harold
Bloom in his introduction to this enchanting and much-needed
anthology of exceptional stories and poems selected to
inspire a lifelong love of reading. As television, video
games, and the Internet threaten to distract young people
from the solitary pleasures of reading, Bloom presents
a volume that will amuse, challenge, and beguile readers
with its myriad voices and subjects.
Here
are old favorites by beloved writers of children's literature,
as well as exciting rediscoveries and wonderful works
penned by writers better known for their adult classics,
such as Herman Melville, Leo Tolstoy, Edith Wharton, and
Walt Whitman. Encompassing the natural world and the supernatural;
childhood, romance, and death; house pets, wild animals,
and goblins; mystery, adventure, and humor, the selections
reflect the passion and erudition of our most revered
literary critic. Dismayed by the current state of children's
literature, Bloom reaches back to the imaginative works
of the nineteenth century and earlier, choosing poems
and stories that will expand the mind and offer the magical
companionship of the best that has been written. Arranged
by season, Stories and Poems for Extremely Intelligent
Children of All Ages is a must-have anthology, sure to
delight readers young and old for years to come.