Home > Books & Magazines > Printed Book >

Reviews for Just So Stories - Rudyard Kipling


Bi-Coloured-Python-Rock-Snake -  Just So Stories - Rudyard Kipling Printed Book
amazon
Just So Stories - Rudyard Kipling 

Newest Review: ... iving from these other lives important moral lessons about l... more

Bi-Coloured-Python-Roc k-Snake (Just So Stories - Rudyard Kipling)

jillmurphy

Member Name: jillmurphy

Product:

Just So Stories - Rudyard Kipling

Date: 20/05/02 (492 review reads)
Rating:

Advantages: Er...

Disadvantages: Er...


Are you a person of Infinite-Resource-And-Sagacity? Sounds good that, doesn't it? I'm not sure I'm a person of Infinite-Resource-And-Sagacity, not like the mariner who hitched a lift home to England from a hungry whale and in doing so made sure that hungry whales would eat only small fish and never men or boys or little girls, but I'm pretty sure I'd like to be. Kieran would like to be the Djinn In Charge Of All Deserts because he can make extremely good magic and Conor would like to be Parsee Pestonjee Bomonjee because he wears a rather sexy hat and eats only cakes which are two feet across and three feet thick (I wouldn't mind being the Parsee either).

You do know what we're talking about, don't you? You do know the answers to some of the most important questions of all? You know how the whale got his throat? You know how the leopard got his spots? You know how the rhinoceros got his wrinkly, wrinkly skin? You know how the first letters were made? Why the cat walks by himself? Well, if you don't then you're missing out. Get thee over to Amazon and order yourself a copy of Rudyard Kipling's Just So Stories. They'll tell you all the things you need to know.

Among the simplest of myth stories are the why stories or pourquoi tales. These are stories about how things came to be. Why does night follow day? Why does spring follow winter? And how did that leopard get his spots? Most cultures across the world include why stories in their oral traditions. Different to the why stories, but still part of oral story-telling tradition, is a set of Indian folk tales known as the Jatakas. Jataka is a Buddhist name for the stories concerning the rebirths of Buddha who was reincarnated many times in the form of many different animals until he became at last Buddha, the Enlightened One. I suppose these Jataka stories, then, are really about a man living briefly as an animal, consorting with other animals, and der
iving from these other lives important moral lessons about life as a human being. I know that must all sound terribly boring but I think the oral tradition is an important one, I think it connects each generation with the generations that came before and I think it helps us all connect with our world in many, many ways. So I wanted to nag you about pourquoi tales and the Jatakas because I think Rudyard Kipling felt like me about these things and they are the traditions he drew upon when he wrote the Just So Stories. So humour me just for a moment longer.

Living in India for many years and thus familiar with the forms and patterns of these traditional forms of story-telling, Kipling wrote this, his own collection of explanatory tales, in a gloriously florid and very, very funny imitation of the old way. "How The Whale Got His Throat" and "How The Leopard Got His Spots", those stories I told you about above start out seriously, with great solemnity, as if a lesson is about to begin, and they end with an abandoned but logical kind of nonsense that reminds me of Alice in Wonderland. Another super one and a great favourite of ours is "The Elephant's Child". This story explains how the elephant's "blackish, bulgy nose, as big as a boot" grew to be the long trunk we see today. It was all because of the "'satiable curtiosity" of the Elephant's Child who, after innumerable spankings for never, ever shutting up, ran away to seek knowledge by the banks of "the great, grey-green, greasy Limpopo River". I'll tell you some of the things he asked:

"He asked his tall aunt, the Ostrich, why her tail-feathers grew just so, and his tall aunt the Ostrich spanked him with her hard, hard claw. He asked his tall uncle, the Giraffe, what made his skin spotty,, and his tall uncle, the Giraffe spanked him with his hard, hard hoof. He asked his broad aunt, the Hippopotamus, why her eyes were
red, and his broad aunt, the Hippopotamus, spanked him with her broad, broad hoof; and he asked his hairy, hairy uncle, the Baboon, why melons tasted just so and his hairy uncle, the Baboon spanked him with his hairy paw. And STILL he was full of 'satiable curtiosity!"

Heehee. That elephant child will remind you, and any children listening of their own "'satiable curtiosity", don't you think? How many impossible-to-answer questions have YOU been asked this week? I hope you didn't do any spanking though, for if you did you'll be sure to get your comeuppance, just as the insatiably curious elephant child gave his naughty spanking relatives their comeuppance after he visited the terrifying crocodile on the bank of the Limpopo river and returned with a trunk. Soon, all the elephants have trunks and there isn't any spanking any more. Quite right too. If you want to find out just how the elephant child did get his trunk from the crocodile you'll just have to get the book I'm afraid, or I'll be quoting all night. And anyway, much as I'd like to sit here finding the best bits and quoting them all to you, it really would be a naughty thing to do because these are stories to be read aloud. They are cadenced, rhythmic, and full of handsome, high-sounding words which are both mouth-filling and ear-delighting. Children soon catch on to the grandiloquent style and the absurd meanings behind the mock serious tone and they laugh with delight.

Children love folk tales just as they love humour. But above all they recognize and appreciate the rhythmic cadence and bright colour of stories that form part of an oral tradition older almost than anything. If you watch little ones you will see them using rhythm constantly; from the chanting of nursery rhyme refrains to the intricate counting games they love to play for hours on end. They accept calmly magical events and talking beasts in stories just as they often inv
ent imaginary companions. Kipling, a doting father, and a man familiar with Indian myth and legend and oral tradition knew these things I think, and crafted for his own children the Just So Stories; his own take on and humorous pastiche of the oldest of the pourquoi tales. Today, he's known by adults as a staunch colonialist and reactionary, which he was, and is often disapproved of for this, but I think that's a shame. You try reading these droll little tales aloud to your children. Feel them come alive as you read, watch your children laugh and roll their eyes: you'll see what I mean.

And once you've read those you can move on to the more serious, but probably even better, Jungle Books. That's a whole 'nother story though, and I'll tell it to you another time. Just you get yourself over to Amazon and buy the Just So Stories now. You'll love them as we do, I promise.



BORING BIT: STOP HERE IF YOU'RE NOT INTENDING TO BUY (AND IF YOU'RE NOT INTENDING TO BUY THEN SHAME ON YOU)

A word to the wise consumer: if you're buying for you then the good old Penguin Classic with Kipling's own, lovely illustrations will be fine, but it's all annotated and irritating if you're reading to children, so find a good picture book version. Oh hang on, I'll have a look at Amazon, just for you lot, don't say I never do anything for you.

This is a lovely one with the Kipling illustrations, but it's £8.49 and you have to wait for it:

http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/18571 59063/qid=1021837306/sr=2-2/ref= sr_2_3_2/026-5723116-6550829

And this is in stock at £3.99 illustrated by Safaya Salter. It looks nice too:

http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/18579 39042/qid=1021837306/sr=1-1/ref= sr_1_3_1/026-5723116-6550829


Summary:

Last members to rate this review:
(70 members total)

sandemp%2Fqrf1%2Fvhart%2Fdave27%2FMykReeve%2Fcalypte%2F

View all 70 member ratings

Overall rating: Very useful

This review has been awarded a Crown.

See all newly Crowned Reviews

Last comments:
Pinkle

- 02/07/02

i have never been able to get into Kipling, unfortunately this is not the case with the cakes by his namesake :O)
Cammij

- 27/05/02

My ex-wife talks about a bi coloured python a lot. Except it had nothing to do with Kipling and more to do with a mulatto named Jerome from Sussex.
helencb

- 25/05/02

A great review, and congratulations on the crown, well deserved once again, Helen

View all 39 comments

Top