The Best French Books For Kids
The Best French Books For Kids
Take a sentimental journey through the Top Ten French childrens' books of all time...and bring out your inner enfant. 1. Le Petit Prince Antoine de Saint-Exupery Most Famous Quote: Tu deviens responsable pour toujours de ce que tu as apprivois You become responsible, forever, for what you have tamed." The Little Prince: Sixtieth-Anniversary Gift Edition Le Petit Prince was first published in 1943 and has since been translated into more than 180 languages and dialects. Given that it comes in at Number 3 for the highest selling books of all time (behind only the Bible and Gone With The Wind), it is not only the most famous childrens story you could read, but has touched at least 50 million lives in the process of becoming so. The story follows the petit histoires of a little prince, who the author discovers stranded in the desert when his own plane crashes in the Sahara. The little prince lives on a tiny planet, where he cultivates a flower that he loves, and must pull out Baobab trees every day. The little prince goes travelling across the universe, meets a number of silly adults, and in the process of the book, reveals a number of secrets that children know and adults forget... to their detriment. Illustrated by de Saint-Exuperys own illustrations, the story is a precious message about the importance of love, responsibility, and caring. It is a charming book that leaves no mystery in the reason for its universal appeal to children and adults everywhere so take it from the children and read it. Becase les grandes personnes ne comprennent jamais rien toutes seules, et c'est fatigant, pour les enfants, de toujours et toujours leur donner des explications - Grown-ups never understand anything by themselves, and it is tiresome for children to have to explain things to them always and forever.
The Adventures of Tintin: Tintin in America / Cigars of the Pharaoh / The Blue Lotus (3 Complete Adventures in One Volume, Vol. 1) Most Famous Quote: Any colourful insult. Eg mille millions de mille milliards de mille sabords! - Billions of bilious blue blistering barnacles! The comic book artist Berge who was responsible for creating The Adventures of Tintin was not French, but Belgian. Nonetheless, his French-language comics about the adventures of a Belgian reporter, his dog Milou, and a whole host of crazy characters, including the grumpy Captain Haddock; deaf Professor Tournesol; and the incompetent detectives Dupond and Dupont, has delighted audiences worldwide, and particularly in France. There are now some 23 albums of comic strips on Tintin, which have been translated into over 50 languages, and more than 200 million copies have been sold to date. The original language version also remains a great way for students of French, of all ages, to learn the language in practice. Tintin books are described as containing slapstick humour, satire and political commentary. Alternatively, theyre just a whole lot of colourful fun and Tonnerre de Brest! for the junior reader.
and tell the story of a young elephant who leaves the jungle to see civilised life (i.e. Paris), then brings all those secrets back to his home in the jungle. Six Babar stories were originally written by de Brunhoff, but after his death, the job fell to his son Laurent de Brunhoff, who continued the series with gusto, adding another ten stories to the collection.
Although the books have been criticised for their explicit support of French colonialism in backward Africa, they have been the inspiration for a number of films and television shows since the 1960s, both in French and English. They remain a passion for many, no doubt less due to their perceived political messages, and more to their undeniably endearing and stylised illustrations.
French audiences for hundreds of years. First penned in literary form by Charles Perrault in 1695, the stories were translated into English in 1729, and have since been cemented as a classic childhood standard the world over. Tales of Cinderella, Sleeping Beauty, Little Thumb, Puss in Boots, Blue Beard and Little Red Riding Hood have defined children for generations. But how about The Fairy and Riquet of the Tuft? If youd like the full Mother Goose treatment, no childs bookcase should be without the Contes de Mere lOye. 6. Voyage au Centre de la Terre (Journey to the Centre of the Earth) Jules Verne
Journey to the Center of the Earth (Enriched Classic)Pitched at older child readers, Journey to the Centre of the Earth is a science fiction classic that follows the adventures of a professor, his nephew and their guide, who enter a volcano in Iceland and take the much-mused trip into the centre of everyones favourite planet, Earth. As would be expected from adventures of this scale, the classic tale has not only captured bookworms but also film buffs over the last hundred years, with big screen adaptations made in 1959 and 1976, and a new James Cameron 3D film (starring Brendan Fraser) planned for July 2008. In the meantime, you can obtain an English translation of the work for free, courtesy of Project Gutenberg just click here . 7. Les Malheurs de Sophie Comtesse de Segur
Les Malheurs de Sophie (Dodo Press) First published in 1859, Les Malheurs de Sophie was written by a woman (gasp!) and rightfully seeks to impart a message of good behaviour upon all children who might suffer the temptation to be wicked. The stories centre upon a mischievous little girl called Sophie, along with her accomplice, cousin Paul. Each story is an opportunity for the Comtesse to provide a moral education on how to be gentle, truthful and sincere, while avoiding those terrible sins of greediness, lying and stealing that children so often feel tempted to skip into.
While we would never suggest that your little one needs any sort of French education on such topics (!) the series has been highly popular in France, and undoubtedly has indirectly moulded generations of French people who feel obliged to tell you right from wrong on the street, in the park, at the pharmacy, etc... The edition must therefore be an essential item for any self-respecting Francophile!
8. LImagier du Pere Castor Anne Telier L'imagier du Pre Castor In France, an imagier is a picture book designed with the intention of introducing children to a wider vocabulary. Limagier du Pere Castor is a French classic, created in the 1950s, and still a whimsical, standard nursery item sixty years later. It contains 470 illustrated words, which are grouped into 10 themes. Along with a doudou, this petit livre is a must for any respecting French child or any adult student of French who wants to improve their vocabulary! 9. La Science de l Oncle Paul: Entretiens Familiers due les Animaux, les Plantes, les Mineraux, le Ciel, la Terre, lIndustrie The Story Book Of Science Jean Henri Fabre Jean Henri Fabre was a naturalist whose writings have appealed to beetle-hunting boys and grub-catching girls, as well as passionate adults, for almost one hundred years. Fabre wrote prolifically on scientific subjects, and although he was responsible for a number of children-oriented writings in addition to adult editions, his 1918 offering, The Story Book Of Science, tells of natures mysteries in a charming and delicate fashion, through conversations between the main character Uncle Paul and his willing students. The language is a little heavy and dated, but the sentiment is enough to have you dusting off the butterfly net and wandering the hot Normandy countryside seeking crickets this summer.
La Belle-Nivernaise: Histoire d'un vieux bateau et de son quipage (French Edition) Alphonse Daudet wrote mostly for adults, but also wrote a number of stories for children, which captured their beating little hearts in high fashion. The most famous of these stories is La Belle Nivernaise, which tells of an old boat and her crew. The story does not appear to have been translated into English, but may be downloaded in original language through Project Gutenberg just click here.