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Good morning, Brazil! I like that long word, Saudade

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Edited by Jim McCrory, Friday, 28 June 2024, 09:21


   “Truly I say to you today, you will be with Me in Paradise.”


 

 Image by by https://unsplash.com/@rachidnl

 

I have a deep secret. I am happy to tell you what it is so long as you do not tell anyone. Is that a deal? This is my secret. I love children’s books; at my age I should know better, but it is an addiction. I love them so much that I did a Children’s Literature module at university.

Gyo Fujikawa is the most addictive for me. Children in paradise, in tree houses, gentle fairies and children no bigger than polka-dot toadstool.

https://www.newyorker.com/books/page-turner/how-gyo-fujikawa-drew-freedom-in-childrens-books

Then there’s Astrid Lindgren’s The Children of Noisy Village. I am a Swedophile who can speak a bit of Swedish and I am in awe of the beauty and setting where the tale is filmed. An age of innocence. Swedish village life that will never return. 

https://tv.apple.com/no/movie/the-children-of-noisy-village/umc.cmc.13bmjs0xgg1sv8sju2tv3za5j

There is the Portuguese word that best explains my longing to enter a world that these stories encapsulate, Saudade, a longing or nostalgia for something that cannot be realised.

I guess the reason such stories appeal is the desire to escape mentally from this broken world. C.S. Lewis wrote:

“If we find ourselves with a desire that nothing in this world can satisfy, the most probable explanation is that we were made for another world.”

Interesting, but what world did C.S Lewis mean? Did he mean the world of The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe? No, he was a Christian and academic. He wrote children’s books and books on Christian apologetics as well as academic books. 

The world he was thinking of was the world recorded in Luke 23:43

  “Truly I say to you today, you will be with Me in Paradise.”


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Hi Jim,

I don't blame you I also like childrens books. I used to read Enid Blytons Famous five books I used to devour them and spent all my pocket money on them!

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I also liked the Grim Brothers stories.

It was wonderful being a kid and reading all those lovely stories for the first time.

Gill

https://unsplash.com/@santesson89

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Yip, Gill, I read all the Famous Five and Secret Seven books. I looked at at one of them recently and thought it was very Victorian in the language. Stiff upper lip and all that.