Three little bears sitting on chairs
Goodnight Moon Three Little Bears Sitting On Chairs - Goodnight Moon Three Little Bears
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Curious Monkeys, Fantastic Foxes, and Three Little Bears Sitting on Chairs
Curious Monkeys, Fantastic Foxes, and Three Little Bears Sitting on Chairs
By Ilene Dube
Photography by Andrew Wilkinson
The world brought to life in children’s literature thrives in a region that celebrates with libraries, bookstores and festivals.
On trains and planes, on the beach or in an overstuffed chair by the fire, the written word is served up on electronic devices, but those under age 8 are still turning the pages between cloth covers. Children, and the adults who love to read to them, can still escape into the magical world of wild things and the night kitchen, green eggs and ham and a purple crayon that can make all nine kinds of pie Harold likes best, and say goodnight to the great green room and the telephone.
An understanding of literary characters is one of the first ways a young child has of making sense of what it is to be human, says Kay Vandergrift’s Children’s Literature page on the Rutgers University website. “We all come to know more clearly who and what we are while reaching out, imaginatively, for what we might become.”
It is no surprise that Princeton, with its academic institutions and intellectual pursuits, is hot for children’s literature, with the nation’s largest children’s book festival taking place every September in Hinds Plaza. Many of the authors and publishers either live or are from here, and Princeton University’s Firestone Library includes a children’s library with holdings going back to the 15th century. The Cotsen Library’s public reading space with a two-story bonsai tree brings the world of picture books to life.
Ik-Joong Kang’s “Happy World” mural, Tom Nussbaum’s playful sculptures and Faith Ringgold’s “Tar Beach” mosaic welcome children and their families to the Princeton Public Library, where the youth services department is planning its ninth annual Children’s Book Festival for Sept. 20. Festival Coordinator and Youth Services Librarian Allison Santos recalls how it began with 22 very local authors, and grew to include 86 authors from across the country, drawing a crowd of 4,000 in 2013. Authors vie to participate.
“We even have unique artwork created for us,” says Santos, whose office displays posters designed by children’s book illustrators Sophie Blackall, Peter Brown and John Rocco—the latter includes the library building in the background.
The festival has been cherished by the community from its inception. Princeton is passionate about reading, writing and education, says Santos, who sees families leaving the library with stacks of books during summer reading clubs.
THE BEAR AND THE BOOKS
“We live in an educated priveleged corner of the country and parents are very interested in their children becoming readers,” says Bobbie Fishman, who owns The Bear and the Books in Hopewell. “Part of that culture involves starting early.”
Fishman was formerly children’s book buyer at Micawber Books, Princeton’s dearly departed independent bookstore, which featured an outstanding children’s collection. When Micawber closed in 2007, Fishman went to start the children’s section at Labyrinth Books, remaining there until spring 2012. In October 2013 she opened The Bear and the Books on Hopewell’s Broad Street.
The opportunity came to her while out walking. The Hopewell resident learned that Dharma Books—“an off beat, beatnik bookstore with ’60s books”—had shuttered its doors. With some paint and carpentry, the formerly dark space could become a childhood fantasy world.
Fishman painted the walls yellow. She put barn siding on the floor, and had custom shelves built from framing timbers, as well as a table and cash desk. Her friend Jody Olcott, who runs the shop Ebb next door, painted the sign, modeled on pub signs Fishman saw while visiting her daughter at Oxford. She also turned the front windows into display shelves that can be seen from both sides.
Can you find the secret painting? Look for the stools painted with an elephant and hedgehog. Continue searching under the little desk—only those small enough to crawl under can see it.
“I never cared what I did but about what it could teach me,” says the former freelance editor and Crossroads Nursery School teacher (1989- 1992), rocking in a small chair surrounded by neatly stacked shelves of picture books.
As an editor Fishman had worked with writers to develop medical, humanities and art history textbooks (“I was a fantastic editor because I knew nothing and could advise authors on what needed to be explained”). Micawber owner Logan Fox knew her as a customer and invited her to join his staff. It took several years for her to break away from her editing and accept his offer in 1998.
“It was the best job in the world, I loved my customers and what I did,” she recollects.
Fishman says she will only sell what she can stand behind. As an undergraduate at Sarah Lawrence, she learned from Grace Paley that “real writing isn’t something you know about until you’re in the middle of it and you can’t know what’s going to happen, you have to let it happen and listen to it.
“That’s what makes the difference between merchandized books and real books—either you have a story to tell or you don’t,” she continues.
This is the criteria she uses to select books from the samples she gets from publishers. She describes it as an instinctual sense. “Some feel genre driven—there are hot subjects and you know the books were written to sell. Kids want to read them because it’s all they see—if everything out there is the same, kids think that’s what they’re supposed to read. But if you tell a kid about a good book they’ll read it. I do think readers recognize good books and they will sell. Kids will get tired of merchandized books and will hunger for more.”
Books in series can be comforting to a reader, she admits. “When you’re just learning to read, you want something that bolsters confidence and you don’t want to have to meet new characters.”
Fishman and her husband raised their own children without TV. “I was a huge TV watcher as a child but by high school I couldn’t stand the sound.” She read aloud to her children until they were 12. Her son, 30, now in his second year of law school, likes writing, and her daughter, 28, who is finishing her dissertation at Oxford, still enjoys reading children’s books. “Good readers never outgrow a good book,” says Fishman. “Good readers go back and reread.”
The Bear and the Books does not offer story hour. “I believe in reading out loud but it’s not an event you go to,” says Fishman. “I’d be happy to read to anyone at any time but not as a scheduled performance. ”
Both Santos and Fishman agree that children still love to read books and digital devices have not yet impinged on this. “The publishers don’t offer much in children’s literature for digital devices,” says Santos. “Parents still like to put physical books in children’s hands. The size of the page and the placement of the text can’t be replicated on an e-reader, and the page and picture tell the story— even if you’re not reading the words. A digital device doesn’t capture that.”
90,000 three bears - Russian folk tale
Russian folk tale
In , one village of Owl, a little girl. And her name was Mashenka.
Mashenka was a good girl, but the trouble is that she was not very obedient. Once Mashenka's parents went to the market in the city, and she was told not to leave the house anywhere, to take care of the housework. But Mashenka did not listen to them, and ran away into the forest. She walked, walked through the forest, ran through the clearings, picked flowers. Gathered berries and mushrooms, and did not notice how lost in the forest. She, of course, was very upset, but did not burst into tears. Because you can't help grief with tears. And Mashenka began to look for her way home. She walked through the forest, walked, and came across some kind of hut.
If Mashenka had known who lived in this hut, she would not have approached her for any reason, but would have run in the other direction. Yes, but she didn’t know that she came across a house in which three bears lived. The bear's father's name was Mikhail Potapovich. He was huge and shaggy. The bear's mother's name was Nastasya Petrovna, she was smaller in size and not so shaggy. And the little bear cub, whose name was Mishutka, was completely funny and harmless.
Mother Nastasya Petrovna cooked delicious semolina porridge. The bears wanted to eat it with raspberries. They all went to the forest to pick berries for dinner. And there was no one at home at the time.
Mashenka came up to the hut and knocked on the door. But no one answers her and does not open the door. There was no one at home, the bears all went into the forest. Then Masha went into the house herself and began to look around. There were two rooms in the hut. There was a huge table in the first room. There were chairs at the table. A snow-white tablecloth is spread out on the table, and plates are arranged on it. When Mashenka saw the plates on the table, she really wanted to eat, because she wandered through the forest for a long time and had not eaten for a very long time. She, of course, knew that without asking you can not take anything from someone else. But the porridge in the bowls smelled so delicious... And Mashenka could not resist.
Mashenka sat down on the biggest chair, took the biggest spoon, and tried the porridge from the biggest plate. Mashenka really liked the porridge, but the spoon turned out to be very uncomfortable. Then Masha moved to the middle chair. And she began to eat porridge from an average plate, an average spoon. The porridge was very tasty too. Only Masha was very uncomfortable to sit on the middle chair. And then she moved to the smallest chair, took the smallest spoon and ate all the porridge from a small blue plate. And she liked this porridge so much that when she had finished everything, she began to lick the rest of the porridge from the plate with her tongue. Even though I knew it couldn't be done. And Masha's little blue plate slipped out of her hands, fell to the floor, and broke!
Masha leaned under the table to see what was with the plate, and at that moment the legs of the chair broke, and she ended up on the floor following the plate.
Mashenka got up from the floor and went to see what was in the other room. And in the second room, the three bears had a bedroom. Mashenka saw that there were three beds in the room. Big, small and very small.
She decided to lie down on the big bed first. The pillows on the large bed seemed uncomfortable to her. Then Masha moved to the middle bed. But there the blanket was too big for her. Finally, Mashenka lay down on a small bed. Everything suited her there. And she fell fast asleep.
Meanwhile, the bears returned home. They picked up raspberries, worked up an appetite. They entered the house, washed their paws and began to sit down at the table - to have dinner. They look: and they seem to have someone visiting!
Mikhail Potapovich looked at his chair, and how he roared:
— Who was sitting on my chair and moved it from its place?
Nastasya Petrovna looked at her chair, and after her husband cried out:
— And who was sitting on my chair and moved him?
And little Mishutka saw his broken chair and cried in a thin voice:
— And who was sitting on my chair and broke it???
Mikhail Potapovich looked at his plate, and how he roared:
— Who ate porridge from my plate?
Nastasya Petrovna looked into her cup, and let's also shout:
— And who ate porridge from my plate?
And little Mishutka saw his favorite blue plate broken on the floor and cried even harder:
— And who ate all my porridge and broke my favorite plate?
Three bears went to the bedroom.
Mikhail Potapovich looked at his bed, and how he roared:
— Who was lying on my bed and crushed it?
And Nastasya Petrovna followed him:
— And who was lying on my bed and wrinkled it? And only little Mishutka said nothing. Because I saw Mashenka on my bed. Mashenka woke up at that time, saw three bears and was very frightened. Then Mishutka says to her:
- Don't be afraid of us, girl, we are kind bears, we don't offend people. Mashenka calmed down, stopped being afraid of bears. She felt ashamed, and she asked the bears for forgiveness for the porridge she had eaten, the broken plate, the broken chair and the rumpled beds. She asked for forgiveness and began to correct her mistakes herself. She swept the fragments of the plate from the floor, made the beds. And then she helped Mikhail Potapovich to repair Mishutkin's chair.
After that, the three bears treated Masha to raspberries and helped her find her way home. Mashenka thanked them, said goodbye, and quickly ran home to her mother and father so that they would not worry. And the next day Mashenka gave Mishutka a new plate. Beautiful. Mishutka really liked this plate.
- END -
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Category: Uncategorized Tags: bazaar, girl, hut, she-bear, bear, folk tales, folk tales for children, Russian folk tales, Russian tales, fairy tales, fairy tales for children
Riddles about the Three Bears | KidsClever.ru
Riddles
Children's riddles about the Three Bears with answers. The Three Bears is an English fairy tale for children that has been translated into many languages of the world.
Near the forest, on the edge,
Three of them live in a hut.
There are three chairs and three mugs.
Three beds, three pillows.
Guess without a clue,
Who are the heroes of this fairy tale?
Answer: Three Bears
---
Fedya reads in syllables:
This fairy tale ...
Answer: Three bears
---
Cups three and three beds.
There are also three chairs, look,
And there are indeed tenants here
Lives exactly ... (three)
As you can see, it’s immediately clear:
Going to visit them ... (dangerous)
Run away quickly, little sister,
Fly out of the window like ... (bird)
Run away! Well done!
So, the whole fairy tale ... (end)
Fedya reads in syllables:
This is a fairy tale - ... .
Answer: Three bears
---
Near the forest, on the edge,
Three of them live in a hut.
There are three chairs and three mugs,
Three beds, three pillows.
Guess without a clue,
Who are the heroes of this fairy tale?
Answer: Three bears
---
A girl is sitting in a basket
At the bear's back.
He himself, without knowing it,
Carries her home?
Answer: Masha
---
The girl was walking through the forest
And came across a house.
There are no owners in that house.
There is lunch on the table.
I drank from three cups,
I lay down in three beds…
Who lived in that house?
Tell me - I forgot ...
Answer: Three bears
---
Three bears lived in the house:
father, mother and son.
They have three bowls on the table,
there are only three chairs at the table.
Masha came to visit
and accidentally fell asleep
on Mishutka's bed...
Tell this story in order
, guys!
Answer: Three bears
Kiseleva Olga
---
A family lived in a forest hut,
The family never expected guests.
Suddenly Masha came to visit
Wandered to them.
I ate all the porridge.
Yes, I went right away.
Answer: Three bears
---
What kind of guest came to the house
To the three forest bears?
I ate and drank there,
I slept in three beds,
And the owners returned -
I barely took my legs!
Answer: Three bears
---
Masha went into the forest with a basket.
I got a little lost there.
I came across a hut,
ate porridge, went to bed.
And the owners of food
turned out to be ... .
Answer: Three bears
Marina Blinnikova
---
Near the house on the edge of the forest
Three of them live in a hut.
There are three chairs and three mugs,
Three beds, three pillows.
Guess without a clue,
Who are the heroes of this fairy tale? …
Answer: Three bears
---
Everyone knows this story,
I'll tell you a secret,
The family lives in a hut,
The three of us eat, sleep, sit on chairs!
You guessed it, this fairy tale .