Little Bee is not as avid a reader as Big Bee, although she is fairly fascinated by Enid Blyton's Enchanted Wood series and some of her short story collections. She is also captivated by the simpler
Princess Posey books, although this series of books had been really elusive. Hence, when she discovered the entire series in the library this past weekend, she was elated and promptly borrowed all she could find!
Lately, she was also mesmerized by the Usborne compilations of Shakespeare and Charles Dickens. I could never thank Usborne enough for bringing the usually inaccessible classics (especially Shakespeare!) to young, inquiring minds - opening up their minds to the literary giants that had enthralled us when we were teenagers.
These 2 books are never far from reach in her bedroom, and she would potter around with them, reading stories that had enraptured so many people around the world. Her favourite Shakespearean stories are the romances - Romeo and Juliet, and Twelfth Night. To be fair, I had not introduced the tragedies like Macbeth and King Lear to her yet, although I would not think she would relish them at this age.
As for the Dickens classics, she really enjoyed Oliver Twist, and would pore over the pages before bedtime on most nights. I must also thank the attractive illustrations in the Usborne series for grabbing the attention of my little visual learner. It is amazing to see some of those stories illustrated in vivid, brilliant colours!

There had been plenty of debates about whether children should be exposed to the original texts of Shakespeare first, or through the live performances of his plays. For Big Bee, she has friends who had started reading the original script of Macbeth, but I wonder how much can 11-year-old tweens absorb in terms of the language, themes, plots and personifications through the original texts? Don't get me wrong - I am a fan of Shakespeare, and would spend hours poring over the scripts, and memorising quotes from Shakespeare's myriad plays when I was a young literature student. But I am just not convinced that the original scripts of Shakespeare could enrich the language competency of younger school children.
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This is a more challenging, but still compelling, read - more suitable for kids who are 9-year-old and above. |
This is why I applaud Usborne and Puffin Classics (which Big Bee had devoured since the age of 9) for simplifying Shakespeare into the palatable and riveting stories that they are, so that younger children can now read them, before attempting to enjoy the original scripts when they are older.
Their enjoyment of Shakespeare's works in stages of comprehension can be summarised in one of my favourite quotes from Romeo and Juliet, I think!
"This bud of love by summer's ripening breath,
May prove a beauteous flower when next we meet."
What are your favourite Shakespeare or Charles Dickens stories? For me, it had been Twelfth Night and Romeo & Juliet from Shakespeare, as well as Great Expectations from Dickens all these years :)