A revisionist storyteller provides his mad, hilarious versions of children's favorite tales in this unique and riotous collection.
A long time ago, people used to tell magical stories of wonder and enchantment. Those stories were called Fairy Tales.
Those stories are not in this book. The stories in this book are Fairly Stupid Tales.
I mean, what else would you call a story like "Goldilocks and the Three Elephants"? This girl walking through the woods smells Peanut Porridge Cooking. She decides to break into the Elephants' house, eat the porridge, sit in the chairs, and sleep in the beds. But when she gets in the house she can't climb up on Baby Elephant's chair because it's much too big. And she can't climb on Papa Elephant's chair because it's much much too big. So she goes home. The End.
And if you don't think that's fairly stupid, you should read "Little Red Riding Shorts" or maybe "The Stinky Cheese Man."
In fact, you should definitely go read the stories now, because the rest of this description just kind of goes on and on and doesn't really say anything. I stuck it here so it would fill up the page and make it look like I really knew what I was talking about. So stop now. I mean it. Quit reading this. Open the book. If you read this last sentence, it won't tell you anything.
Signed, Jack (Narrator) Up the Hill Fairy Tale Forest 1992
Story List: - Chicken Licken - The Princess and the Bowling Ball - The Really Ugly Duckling - The Other Frog Prince - Little Red Running Shorts - Jack's Bean Problem (including Giant Story / Jack's Story) - Cinderummpelstiltskin (Or The Girl Who Really Blew It) - The Tortoise and the Hair - The Stinky Cheese Man
SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING: It has been determined that these tales are fairly stupid and probably dangerous to your health.
Jon Scieszka is an American children's writer, best known for picture books created with the illustrator Lane Smith. He is also a nationally recognized reading advocate, and the founder of Guys Read – a web-based literacy program for boys whose mission is "to help boys become self-motivated, lifelong readers."
Book Review 4 out of 5 stars to The Stinky Cheese Man and Other Fairly Stupid Tales, a re-appropriation of classic fairy tales, published in 1992 by Jon Scieszka. What a hilarious book! Sometimes the classics need a little refresher, and when you add a dose if stupid and fun humor, how can you go wrong? The author and the artist have created a superb work for modern times, where children can easily do a read and compare between the versions of centuries ago and the modern re-telling that stand alongside. Not for the faint of heart, especially if you don't want to see some of your favorite characters pushed and pulled a little! It's one of those books where you just need to relax and enjoy it -- don't get caught up in the craziness of what the author's done or said. Think of it as a way to compare old and new... and when the kids are old enough, it might be a tool to help them learn to love analyzing literature and comparing two things that are similar but very different. Take a chance! You know you wanna...
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They keep making postmodernism accessible to younger and younger age groups. This is a typical postmodern take on the fairy-story genre - they even present Jack the Giant-Killer as an infinite regress of meta-stories - but it's done skillfully enough that I've met bright 6-year-olds who found it funny and got the point.
The rest of this review is available elsewhere (the location cannot be given for Goodreads policy reasons)
Amusing and yes, these are stupid tales. They are silly and not what you expect. The winners and losers change places. I do like Chickin Lickin'. Cute name. Maybe, back in 1992, this was more surprising than it is now, I can't remember. It's interesting.
My nephew had me read it and he enjoyed the book and laughed when he was supposed to. The Stinky Cheese man was his favorite. He knew that it was like the Gingerbread man. He had fun.
I did like how the narrator broke into several of the stories to make a through link.
Now I guess I can to a certain extent appreciate the parodistic intent of Jon Scieszka's The Stinky Cheese Man and Other Fairly Stupid Tales. However and that having all been said, Scieszka's retold narratives do not really work at all well for me as satires (as parodies), and primarily due to the fact there are simply far far too many tales presented. For honestly, as soon as the plot lines of the given stories of The Stinky Cheese Man and Other Fairly Stupid Tales seem to become somewhat interesting and entertaining to and for me, there generally is an abrupt and rushed ending inserted by the author, and another, similarly choppy and equally annoyingly uneven tale commences (which sure does lead to potential distraction and for me, as well as massive tedium and frustration, and indeed so much so that I only very briefly and cursively skimmed the last three stories, and with scant regret).
And while I am, in fact, still able to find a very select few of the ten or so adapted narratives of The Stinky Cheese Man and Other Fairly Stupid Tales potentially funny and entertaining enough (as I will admit to chuckling a bit and with appreciation at the tale of the princess and the bowling ball and the story of the princess being tricked, being scammed by a non enchanted frog prince) even this truth, this factoid is simply NOT enough for me to rate The Stinky Cheese Man and Other Fairly Stupid Tales with more than one star, well, actually with one and a half stars, if half stars were possible (as personally, the choppy and frustratingly uneven endings combined with the fact that I also rather majorly detest the accompanying illustrations, which while expressive and artistically competent, I just seem to find creepy and most aesthetically unpleasing, their Caldecott Honour designation for illustrator Lane Smith quite notwithstanding, all of this really does make me rather majorly dislike The Stinky Cheese Man and Other Fairly Stupid Tales and indeed in every way).
3.75 Stars for The Stinky Cheese Man and Other Fairly Stupid Tales (audiobook) by Jon Scieszka and Lane Smith read by Mike Ferreri. The title of the book is spot on. It’s really short and kind of funny.
Back in 1989, “The True Story of the Three Little Pigs” was the most popular children’s book ever written and that’s where the Jon Scieszka and Lane Smith team made their famous trademark as children’s book writers. In 1992, a new children’s book, made by the Scieszka/Smith team has proclaimed its hallmark of fame as one of the funniest books ever written. That book is called “The Stinky Cheese Man and other Fairly Stupid Tales,” and has became a classic in its own right and won numerous awards, including the 1993 Caldecott Honor Book.
“The Stinky Cheese Man and other Fairly Stupid Tales” is one of the few books that contain so much humor. The humor is sarcastic as it is witty and the humor gives each character in the story a very unique personality that makes the reader want to be like them. Jon Scieszka’s storytelling is probably the book’s major strong point as he fills the book with witty humor such as, the Little Red Hen continuously popping up as an interlude to the other stories and the giant trying to make his own story by sticking together an odd assortment of pictures and words together. Lane Smith’s illustrations are fantastic and humorous, especially of the image of the wolf and Little Red Running Shorts leaving the story as it seems that they were cut out of the image of the house and the woods leaving two white spaces in the image.
“The Stinky Cheese Man” is a pure classic that will make people laugh for many years. Its good sense of humor and creative drawings by the dynamic duo, Jon Scieszka and Lane Smith has made this book an international success. I would highly recommend this book to anyone interested in good humor and creativity from the Scieszka/Smith duo.
Now this is the kind of literature children of all ages should be reading. The ugly duckling is just ugly. And didn't we all loathe the "Princess and the Pea"? Back then it was just so important to teach our vulnerable young that royalty are so constitutionally different from us - wholly different protoplasm, so delicate, so high maintenance, that they could detect a pea under 100 mattresses. Blech. In this one the Prince tires of waiting for a princess who could detect a pea (no one could - i liked that) so he slips in a bowling ball. That, a real person might feel. A much improved story. But my favorite of all these delicious tales is the title tale - a revision of (i guess?) the Gingerbread Man. "Run, run, as fast as you can. You can't catch me, I'm the --- man". Except no one wants to chase the Stinky Cheese man, much the opposite, making his taunts hilarious. And the accompanying art is just as educationally realist dada. i loved it. i just wish i had a short, young reason to rationalize not giving it away...
Yeah, this is a really weird book - as the title very clearly indicates. But it's also quite amusing, and spoofs several well-known fairy tales. Been a long time since I read this, i think I need to re-read it and see how I appreciate it as an adult.
My kids loved this book and I loved reading it to them. The twisted take on well known fairy tales really appealed to my own little piggies and got them thinking up their own goofy fairy land remakes.
Picture Book "If geese had graves, Mother Goose would be rolling in hers. The Stinky Cheese Man and Other Fairly Stupid Tales retells--and wreaks havoc on--the allegories we all thought we knew by heart. In these irreverent variations on well-known themes, the ugly duckling grows up to be an ugly duck, and the princess who kisses the frog wins only a mouthful of amphibian slime. The Stinky Cheese Man deconstructs not only the tradition of the fairy tale but also the entire notion of a book. Our naughty narrator, Jack, makes a mockery of the title page, the table of contents, and even the end paper by shuffling, scoffing, and generally paying no mind to structure. Characters slide in and out of tales; Cinderella rebuffs Rumpelstiltskin, and the Giant at the top of the beanstalk snacks on the Little Red Hen. There are no lessons to be learned or morals to take to heart--just good, sarcastic fun that smart-alecks of all ages will love."
Hilarious book because they take a familiar fairy tale and put a few new twists, which the kids love. The illustrations are so whimsical. I would recommend this book for any fairy tale unit, or read aloud book, for children in first grade and up.
I was walking through a bookstore with my cousin who is 5 years younger than me when we came across a display of The Stinky Cheese Man. She exclaimed, "Didn't you just love this book as a kid?!" I had to admit that I hadn't heard of it before, which I was a bit embarrassed about, since she was so enthusiastic and adamant that it was a must read as a kid. I checked the copyright and found that about the time this was published, I was just starting high school. Mystery solved! I'm now an adult and can read whatever I want, without embarrassment, so I checked out a copy at my local library.
I have read books illustrated and written by Lane Smith, so artistically and structurally, I knew I was in for a treat. The nonsensical nature of the stories, along with the clever art direction has made this book a "new" classic for me! I laughed aloud, admired the pictures and just generally appreciated that their are such talented, clever and silly authors creating books for kids!
This book is simply genius. I've not read it for a few years now but I remember taking it out of the library again and again, laughing out every time.
The book is a picture book but with lots of different fairy tales that have been twisted and warped into a fabulous and hilarious read.
You think you know classic tales like the Gingerbread Man, Jack and the Beanstalk and Little Red Riding Hood? Think again. With clever tweaks and twists, some of them are linked together in an interesting and unique way.
In summary, if you haven't read this book before and are going to, prepare to have tears of laughter rolling down your face as you hopefully enjoy it as much as I did.
A wonderfully wacky selection of tales. Scieszka so effortlessly twists the traditional to the strange and unconventional, sprinkled with just the right amount of humour for good measure. The narrative defies all kind of order and would be a superb postmodern picturebook to use within KS1 and LKS2. From characters taking control, overwhelming the rather intrusive narrator and popping up in stories where they do not belong, all structure is lost and the book becomes carnage in the best kind of way.
This is a beautifully illustrated, rather surreal– and significantly altered – retelling of ten well known fairy tales. Not only the stories, but also the format of the book is turned upside down (in the case of the dedication page – quite literally!). The contents page is on page nine and comes crashing (again literally) into the ‘Chicken Licken’ story. Characters appear out of sequence, demanding that their stories be told NOW, and the narrator, Jack, interacts with the other characters. The size of the lettering changes throughout, and there are puns – e.g. ‘The Tortoise and the Hair’ where the rabbit claims he can grow his hair faster than the tortoise can run. Not all the stories are of equal quality – I thought the title story, ‘The Stinky Cheese Man’, was quite weak but ‘The Princess and the Bowling Ball’, ‘Cinderrumpelstiltskin, and ‘The Really Ugly Duckling’ were excellent. But the real pleasure in reading this book, is the superb illustrations. Children and adults alike will spend hours poring over every tiny detail. It is the pictures, much more that the stories, that make this a five-star book. I bought this book, because it looked like it could be a quite interesting quick read. I will keep it because of the illustrations.
This is like one of five books from my childhood that had a major influence on my taste in literature and art and it was probably the first that made me fall in love with the book as an object. I remember asking the librarian in my elementary school if I could look at it after he read it to my class because I wanted to see all the weird stuff the creators did with fonts and page layouts and the table of contents gag and the blank page in the middle. I mean there are even jokes on the copyright page. As a kid I always knew reading books was fun but The Stinky Cheese Man showed me that creating them could, and should, be fun too.
Well, I don't know what I was expecting . . . these were a bunch of stupid tales.
I mean, maybe something with a little more humor or wit? Then again, my mom read one of these little stories and laughed out loud, so it's definitely a hit or miss thing.
To know if you'll enjoy this little book of stories, here's what's basically inside:
"There once was a really ugly duckling. But then he grew up and just became a really ugly duck, The End."
The illustrations were beautifully detailed and painted in a very unique style that reminded me a bit of reading Coraline, which was nice! But I just couldn't enjoy this little book overall. The humor wasn't my thing, sorry!