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Read The Wind In The Willows: In Two Volumes (2000)

The Wind In The Willows: In Two Volumes (2000)

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Rating
3.95 of 5 Votes: 3
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ISBN
0744567092 (ISBN13: 9780744567090)
Language
English

The Wind In The Willows: In Two Volumes (2000) - Plot & Excerpts

This is a weird book.It's a curious fusion of the country gentleanimal lifestyle, jaunty road movie, and elegiac paeans to life, humble or wild.It was very hard to me to work out how tall the animals were, or how Toad could be mistaken for a washerwoman, or what it means for a rat to be holding a pistol, or what kind of economy produces cars suitable for animals to drive. How can a toad steal a horse?Don't worry though, even with such quibbles, I was merely distracted on my meander through. You roll with it. Its world is created for the young at heart, even though the wayfarer and piper sections can perhaps only be fully understood when you're an adult... or perhaps never at all.Whatever else, Grahame gave children a lot of credit to put this story in their hands. You can dispense with psychological testing, horoscopes, compatibility checks and relationship counselling, all the panoply of means devised to test whether you and your proposed spouse are destined for a lifetime of conjugal bliss or will split, amid recriminations and bitterness, in a few years' time, for I have found the answer. To know whether you are truly compatible, find out what he or she thought of 'The Wind in the Willows' and the age at which your intended first read it.For myself, 'The Wind in the Willows' is the first book I can recall reading - my mother tells me I was five at the time but since she is firmly convinced of my genius we can probably take that with a pinch of salt - my little legs, marked with the signature pattern of British Rail upholstery, drumming against the metal beneath the seat in one of those old-fashioned train compartments as I breathlessly read through to the end, oblivious of the delight I'm told I caused the other passengers as this small, brown boy plunged into the most English of literary landscapes. I re-read 'The Wind in the Willows' many times when I was young, and regularly through the years, managing to keep my edition in good condition. But this time, when I went to read the story again, for a change I picked up my wife's edition, to find it marked with the inscription 'Harriet Whitbread 1975 Christmas'. So she was six when she first read it, and it has travelled with her through an itinerant life as an actor, through digs and flats, to finally settle with me; we were destined from the moment we each entered Grahame's England.So there, that is the answer. If you and your intended both read 'The Wind in the Willows' at about the same young age, if you both skipped past 'The Piper at the Gates of Dawn' chapter because you didn't really understand it but now find that it has become close to your favourite part of the book, if you both want to take tea with Toad and settle down next to the fire with Rat and Mole, then you have met your soul mate and a life time of domestic happiness is ensured.However, if neither of you have read 'The Wind in the Willows', then you place yourselves at the mercy of Aphrodite; will she make her blessing permanent, or temporary? In all likelihood it will be a marriage that endures rather than blesses. And if your reaction to 'The Wind in the Willows' differs then, I am sorry to say, you are surely destined for divorce; far better not to marry, and find someone else who read the story at the same time as you and appreciates it as you do.And if you tried to read 'The Wind in the Willows' as a child and found it undreadable, objectionable or boring, which opinions you still hold despite being grown and able to know better, then I, for one, am glad never to have made your acquaintance.

What do You think about The Wind In The Willows: In Two Volumes (2000)?

i LOVE Toad. Toad's friends stage an intervention surrounding Toad's ... driving. Toad cries and promises he'll stop. His friends take the dramatic approach of locking Toad up ... but he's not ready to give it up. Toad engages in a bit of theft, deception and vandalism to support his bad habit. Even a stint in prison doesn't deter him. Like all these things, you have to WANT to change, you can't have it forced on you. I think he finally just loses interest in it. Okay so he's a little up himself and conceited, but he's pretty generous and open hearted. A sweet, gentle tale of love, friendship, loyalty and adventure. I can't wait for tomorrow to start reading it again.
—savannaprice

Adventure always starts with a book. This book describes a beautiful story about just that. The vocabulary distracted me,because I didn't realize what they meant, but soon I caught on with the story. It was an exciting story for all ages(I think). If you know how to read, you should get to read this book. It is a well laid out story for young, and old people in any country. This author knew exactly what she was writing while writing this book. It is very inspiring for me as a young writer in 7th grade.
—izuminka

good bedtime reading for kids
—kale

A reread. The memories/
—marisa

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Read books by author Kenneth Grahame

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