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Every child knows the masterpieces of Dr. Seuss—The Cat in the Hat,
Green Eggs and Ham, and Horton Hatches the Egg. But on a deeper level,
these novels share much deeper meaning and express crucial lessons about
through his numerous poems, books, and political cartoons, which each
For example, The Cat in the Hat series tells the story about two little
children, alone at home. They are extremely bored and encounter the Cat, a
colorful character who brings mischief and chaos upon their house.
Eventually, the adventures are ended and the cat is forced to clean up his
mess. Before the parents come home, the Cat leaves and order is restored.
living on a dust ball that is actually a real planet named Who-Ville. Who-Ville
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is in danger of “Beezelnut Oil,” a dangerous liquid that will boil the
population. Horton is determined to tell the other animals about the danger,
which the citizens of Who-Ville will soon endure. At first, he is not very
successful in this task, and the other animals laugh at Horton of what a silly
elephant he is. They claim that it is ridiculous to believe that an entire planet
can be located on a dust ball. But Horton cares about the people of Who-
Ville, despite their size, and eventually convinces the other animals to help
prevent the disaster. Through this children’s book, Dr. Seuss explains the
One of the more realistic books of Dr. Seuss is The Butter Battle Book,
a clever book about war, disguised in a children’s book. Although the book
contains the classic Dr. Seuss genre of unusual words and characters, the
actual thesis of the book is about cold, brutal war. Two hostile cultures live on
opposite sides of a wall. The dispute is between eating toast with the butter
side-up or the butter side-down, which, in the opinion of Dr. Seuss, is just as
World War II, and he used his children’s books and political cartoons to
discourage war among children and the parents who read them. In the story,
each side formulates a weapon in order to keep the other culture on the
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other side of the wall, one weapon more powerful than the next. In order to
present a point, Dr. Seuss constantly reminds the reader why they are
fighting, while in real war, this topic barely crosses the combatants’ minds.
This book breaks the idea of war down into its simplest matter.
Dr. Seuss portrays numerous, valuable life lessons in his wondrous and
magical children’s books. Even when Dr. Seuss chose what pseudonym to
write his books under, he chose “Dr. Seuss” because it sounds like “Mother
Goose,” and the Mother Goose is the one who teaches her goslings. If broken
down, these books can explain multiple lessons, even if they are presented in
demonstrate the works of Dr. Seuss, even if to the untrained eye they seem
immature. Enjoy!