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gollygee

(22,336 posts)
Wed Jun 1, 2016, 07:11 PM Jun 2016

"Frog and Toad:" An Amphibious Celebration of Same-Sex Love

I loved these books growing up, and I've loved sharing them with my kids. I took my older child to the musical when the traveling cast came to town.

http://www.newyorker.com/books/page-turner/frog-and-toad-an-amphibious-celebration-of-same-sex-love

Adrianne suspects that there’s another dimension to the series’s sustained popularity. Frog and Toad are “of the same sex, and they love each other,” she told me. “It was quite ahead of its time in that respect.” In 1974, four years after the first book in the series was published, Lobel came out to his family as gay. “I think ‘Frog and Toad’ really was the beginning of him coming out,” Adrianne told me. Lobel never publicly discussed a connection between the series and his sexuality, but he did comment on the ways in which personal material made its way into his stories. In a 1977 interview with the children’s-book journal The Lion and the Unicorn, he said:

You know, if an adult has an unhappy love affair, he writes about it. He exorcises it out of himself, perhaps, by writing a novel about it. Well, if I have an unhappy love affair, I have to somehow use all that pain and suffering but turn it into a work for children.


Lobel died in 1987, an early victim of the aids crisis. “He was only fifty-four,” Adrianne told me. “Think of all the stories we missed.”

When reading children’s books as children, we get to experience an author’s fictional world removed from the very real one he or she inhabits. But knowing the strains of sadness in Lobel’s life story gives his simple and elegant stories new poignancies. On the final page of “Alone,” Frog and Toad, having cleared up their misunderstanding, sit contently on the island looking into the distance, each with his arm around the other. Beneath the drawing, Lobel writes, “They were two close friends, sitting alone together.”
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"Frog and Toad:" An Amphibious Celebration of Same-Sex Love (Original Post) gollygee Jun 2016 OP
Awww...thanks for this! Coventina Jun 2016 #1
she who must be obeyed ran a frog and toad class for summer enrichment dembotoz Jun 2016 #2
I read these stories to my special needs class recently kimbutgar Jun 2016 #3

dembotoz

(16,803 posts)
2. she who must be obeyed ran a frog and toad class for summer enrichment
Wed Jun 1, 2016, 07:32 PM
Jun 2016

elementary students. final day was performance for the parents.

we stored the set made out of refrigerator boxes in our basement til there was a fire dept inspection......
and that was the end of that.....i dunno between the sets for frog, titanic, knight of the round table....big chunk of the basement stuffed with cardboard...what could have possibly gone wrong


but alas the books were very nice for the age group

kimbutgar

(21,141 posts)
3. I read these stories to my special needs class recently
Wed Jun 1, 2016, 07:50 PM
Jun 2016

They liked them and used them to go into another subject. Like writing a letter, planting a garden, making cookies and taking nature hikes









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