Customer Reviews
Wonderful Horton - By: Marta, 04 Nov 2007 
All children should have the oportunity to read about Horton. He is brave & has a great & tender soul. He can teach us all that being good & being helpful makes the world a better place.I highly recomend this book as well as Horton hatches & egg.
A Seuss classic - By: Nicola A. Mcclymont, 03 Mar 2007 
One of Seuss's best ever, filled with the usual classic nonsense names, rhyme & illustrations. The moral theme for this one,' a person is a person, no matter how small.' Cleverly written, & shares a story of Horton an elephant desperate to protect a microscopic kingdom of whos.' A story about loyalty, respect, faith & making a difference. A must addition to those Seuss collectors, & a great starter for those Seuss virgins.
The Powerful Hear and Respect the Vocal Downtrodden! - By: Donald Mitchell, 05 Sep 2004 
Researchers constantly find that reading to children is valuablein a variety of ways, not least of which are instilling a love of reading & improved reading skills. With better parent-child bonding from reading, your child will also be more emotionally secure & able to relate better to others. Intellectual performance will expand as well. Spending time together watching television fails as a substitute.
To help other parents apply this advice, as a parent of four I consulted an expert, our youngest child, & asked her to share with me her favorite books that were read to her as a young child. Horton Hears a Who! was one of her picks.
On the surface, this is a story about an elephant going the extra mile to respect those who are as different from him as they can possibly be.
"He was splashing . . . enjoying the jungle's great joys . . .
When Horton the elephant heard a small noise."
He notices a speck of dust, passingin the air. With his large ears, he can hear something coming from that dust. Quickly, he imagines that there is some sort of a creature of very small size on the dust.
No one else believes him, & he is taunted & tortured by the other animals . . . who cannot hear the small noise. They think Horton has gone mad! After tribulations that would daunt any decent, dedicated elephant, he must find a way to convince the other animals before they overwhelm him & destroy the dust (and the Whos along with it!).
He tells the tiny Whos to make as much noise as possible. But still the other animals cannot hear them. Finally, the mayor of the Whos finds a shirker who is playing with his yo-yo rather than making noise. As soon as the small Who makes his sound, all the animals can hear. Then the Whos are safe.
The metaphor here is that the strong must protect the weak, but the weak must also be as outspoken as possible if the strong are going to be able to help them. That can make for a wonderful discussion about bullies & pushy childrenin school.
Beyond that, I have always seen this book as Dr. Seuss's apology for his sometimes anti-Japanese cartoons (including an anti-Japanese-American version) during the early days of World War II when he was a political cartoonist (see Dr. Seuss Goes to War). Why do I think that? The book is dedicated as follows: "For My Great Friend, Mitsugi Nakamura of Kyoto, Japan". I read that as being dedicated to all those of Japanese ancestry as well. In this eloquent plea for common decency, Dr. Seuss rises to be a great man.
Discuss with your child when & where these concepts might come into play. Younger siblings & cousins can provide a good starting point. Then you can go on to talk about the role of parentsin helping their children. You'll have a wonderful chat, the first of many.
The Powerful Hear and Respect the Vocally Downtrodden! - By: Donald Mitchell, 19 May 2004 
Researchers constantly find that reading to children is valuablein a variety of ways, not least of which are instilling a love of reading & improved reading skills. With better parent-child bonding from reading, your child will also be more emotionally secure & able to relate better to others. Intellectual performance will expand as well. Spending time together watching television fails as a substitute.
To help other parents apply this advice, as a parent of four I consulted an expert, our youngest child, & asked her to share with me her favorite books that were read to her as a young child. Horton Hears a Who! was one of her picks.
On the surface, this is a story about an elephant going the extra mile to respect those who are as different from him as they can possibly be.
"He was splashing . . . enjoying the jungle's great joys . . .
When Horton the elephant heard a small noise."
He notices a speck of dust, passingin the air. With his large ears, he can hear something coming from that dust. Quickly, he imagines that there is some sort of a creature of very small size on the dust.
No one else believes him, & he is taunted & tortured by the other animals . . . who cannot hear the small noise. They think Horton has gone mad! After tribulations that would daunt any decent, dedicated elephant, he must find a way to convince the other animals before they overwhelm him & destroy the dust (and the Whos along with it!).
He tells the tiny Whos to make as much noise as possible. But still the other animals cannot hear them. Finally, the mayor of the Whos finds a shirker who is playing with his yo-yo rather than making noise. As soon as the small Who makes his sound, all the animals can hear. Then the Whos are safe.
The metaphor here is that the strong must protect the weak, but the weak must also be as outspoken as possible if the strong are going to be able to help them. That can make for a wonderful discussion about bullies & pushy childrenin school.
Beyond that, I have always seen this book as Dr. Seuss's apology for his sometimes anti-Japanese cartoons (including an anti-Japanese-American version) during the early days of World War II when he was a political cartoonist (see Dr. Seuss Goes to War). Why do I think that? The book is dedicated as follows: "For My Great Friend, Mitsugi Nakamura of Kyoto, Japan". I read that as being dedicated to all those of Japanese ancestry as well. In this eloquent plea for common decency, Dr. Seuss rises to be a great man.
Discuss with your child when & where these concepts might come into play. Younger siblings & cousins can provide a good starting point. Then you can go on to talk about the role of parentsin helping their children. You'll have a wonderful chat, the first of many.
Horton the elephant triumphs again! - By: , 24 Apr 2000 
My five year old granddaugter loved this book. We have an arrangement whereby I buy Dr. Seuss books & she reads them to me. Then when she has finished them she takes them home. We had to spend the whole train journey back to her mother reading this because she had loved "Horton Hatches the Egg" so much, found that this seemed as good & wanted to take both books home. We finished it as the train pulled into the station! The humour is as gentle & zany as I expect from Theodore Geisel. The lesson the book teaches is valuable & its delivery delightful. The story is so gripping that I too wanted to get to the end. I strongly recommend this for young readers - & of course for their grandparents. One word of warning: the book is labelled "for the slightly more able". It is for readers who are fluent but young, not beginning beginners.