By Theo. LeSieg
Illustrated by Roy McKie
Copyright 1961
Besides the well-known pseudonym, Dr. Seuss, Theodor Geisel
also used the name Theo. LeSieg for some of his books. Those written under Theo. LeSieg are easy
readers that were not illustrated by Geisel.
Somehow, I didn’t realize until this week that LeSieg is Geisel spelled
backwards! I thought I was quite
observant, but perhaps not!
“Eight! Eight!
And
we can skate.
Look
now!
We
can skate with eight.
But
I can do nine.
And
hop!
And
drink!
You
can not do this,
I
think.”
The competition continues until a bear with a mop comes
running after them, trying to knock those apples off their heads. Soon, everyone else is chasing the three
animals – perhaps jealous of their apple balancing ability! After a crash with a giant apple cart, the book
ends happily, with every animal’s head topped with ten apples.
A child can learn counting and rhyming from this book. They can also learn that reading can be
fun.
I can learn something from this book as well. I’ve never been one to enjoy competition, but
in some cases, a little competition can push us to do things we hadn’t thought
possible. Would the lion, tiger, and dog have gained that spectacular
apple stacking ability separately?
Probably not. But competing
pushed them to work harder to say, “Look,
you. I can do it, too.”
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