The Books
The Big Box (Jump at the Sun)
Hardcover, 48 pages
Published by Jump At The Sun (1999-09-10)
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Amazon Description
Here's what happens when parents, teachers, and other adults try to determine the boundaries of personal freedom for a group of youngsters, "who just can't handle their freedom." To make youngsters abide by their rules, the grown-ups create a world inside a box. A world with toys and games, and treats and gifts, and all kinds of stuff they think children need to be happy and carefree -- everything from a picture of the sky to jelly beans and brand new jeans. All Patty and Mickey and Liza Sue really want is the freedom to be themselves. But even confined inside a box, these clever children find their own ways to be free.One Potato Review
A book like this doesn’t get made without the influence of a Pulitzer Prize winner (it’s co-authored, at least nominally, by Toni Morrison and her son), still it’s kind of thrilling to witness it running around in the wild, a little menacing, a little out of control. Though it would probably remain a little unintelligible also, if the great Giselle Potter were not around to color in the metaphors, because this is finally a fable about all of the ways we trap, or abandon, or surrender our children to stereotypes which owe as much to our lack of imagination as to the wealth of sturdy-sounding diagnoses that are these days everywhere available. And remedies, and panaceas: from television to Chee-tos to Spice Girl T-shirts, according to the Morrisons. Their outrage may not wear well with every reader, though for some it is surely refreshing. This book doesn’t end up offering a lot of solutions exactly for the disruptive little Patty, or the hyperactive Mickey, but it does - to its credit - imagine a future when they have inevitably climbed out of the box.
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