“An alien prince, elephant-eating snakes, self-involved flowers and some extraordinarily self-centered grown-ups… The Little Prince has it all!!” – that is written in review of Mary L.1
I think it’s very direct, because it is a children book, but very incorrect, because it is grown-up book, too. For grown-ups it is philosophical, profound, and full of subtexts e. t. c., but for children it is full of magic and adventures.
It’s very important to reed it when you are a child and when grown-up. I read it first time when I was 18 years old, but I didn’t delve in its subtexts, I just read it like a child. And I loved it very much, because it was so easy and well understandable. But in second time I already thought about its subtexts and importance of characters in book.
In my book report I write summary where I put the main ideas of the book. I mention the major characters and describe them. There is small literary information, too. And in conclusion I write about books mood.
The novel begins with an introduction to the main idea of the book. The narrator explains the drawings of boa constrictors that he made as a young boy. None of the adults who viewed the pictures were able to see the meaning of the drawings. As a result, at an early age, the narrator discovered that most people do not look beneath the surface to see the real message, beauty, or importance of a thing. This becomes the central theme of the entire book.
The plot of the book really begins in the second chapter when the narrator meets the Little Prince. The airplane of the narrator crashes in the desert. As he works on repairing it, the Prince approaches him, seemingly out of nowhere, and asks him to draw a picture of sheep. …