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Both the writing and the illustrations work to offer a better understanding of Irish traditions. All in all, not only an educational read, but a pleasant one, too!
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It would be folly for a teacher to give this book to a child who wants to learn about Halloween. The book is a model of bad scholarship, and if the book doesn't discourage the child's sense of the fun of Halloween -- there is no joy here, only pretension and misunderstanding -- it will surely give kids the wrong kind of example of what history and the study of myth and legend and folklore should be.
The author also can't seem to decide (again, as the other reviewer noted) what kind of book she wants to write -- history or just a fun celebration of Halloween -- with the result that we don't know what we're reading, either. You'd get more of a sense of the spirit and fun of this quintessential American holiday (as it's evolved) by reading fiction or renting a movie than from this dry, errant account.
Halloween isn't just for kids and it isn't just for witches(!) either! As a lover of this holiday, I'd have treasured either a factually accurate account of the Halloween symbols -- which this silly little book purports to be -- or, conversely, a celebration of the spirit of those symbols offered by someone who understands their allure and power. This book offers neither. It's junk, and you shouldn't clutter your (or God forbid, children's) minds with its mock scholarship and insipid, lazy generalizations.
Halloween is too important and too much fun to be left in the hands of the Edna Barths of the world -- people who just don't get it and who think we're too dull to get it, too.
Most children wonder about the origins of Halloween. This book offers them just enough of the history to fascinate them and whet their appetites for more, but not so much that they will never want to read history again.
Did you know, for example, that the Celtic people, who lived more than 2,000 years ago in France and the British Isles, feared October 31, as the eve of their festival of Samhain, Lord of the Dead? Celtic priests, called Druids, held fire rites at these times, at which they sometimes burned prisoners alive, to punish them and to predict the future. But Samhain was also a joyful festival, marking the death of the old year and the start of a new one. There are also brief sections on the history of fairies, Goblins and Little People. The book relates how the stories of these creatures came into being, and leaves open the possibility that they were real.
Barth also offers tasteful sections on the history of witches (whose sabbaths were joyful) and the Horned God, from Biblical times through the Middle Ages. She touches on the Christian war against the Devil and the witch-hunts of Germany, England and America. Finally, she relates that how the wicas of lore and yore became the respectable costumed revelers of modern-day Halloween.
Barth clearly had no intention of writing an exhaustive history. On the contrary, she intended to explain briefly, providing a nice lead-in to chapters on ghosts, toads, broomsticks and owls. To that end--fun--she also explains the Halloween colors of orange and black and current-day masquerades. She offers several not-too-scary Halloween stories and a set of wonderful Halloween recipes.
This book is great for kids who love Halloween--and want to know how it started. Alyssa A. Lappen
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