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Yertle the Turtle and Other Stories

Yertle the Turtle and Other Stories is a picture book collection by Theodor Seuss Geisel, published under his more commonly known pseudonym of Dr. Seuss. It was first released by Random House Books on April 12, 1958, and is written in Seuss's trademark style, using a type of meter called anapestic tetrameter. Though it contains three short stories, it is mostly known for its first story, "Yertle the Turtle", in which the eponymous Yertle, king of the pond, stands on his subjects in an attempt to reach higher than the Moon—until the bottom turtle burps and he falls into the mud, ending his rule.

Yertle the Turtle and Other Stories
AuthorDr. Seuss
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
GenreChildren's literature
Published1950-51 (Redbook)
1958 (Random House)
Media typePrint (hardcover)
OCLC255164
Preceded byThe Cat in the Hat Comes Back 
Followed byHappy Birthday to You! 

Though the book included "burp", a word then considered to be relatively rude, it was a success upon publication, and has since sold more than a million copies. In 2001, it was listed at 125 on the Publishers Weekly list of the best-selling children's books of all time.

Stories edit

Yertle the Turtle edit

The eponymous story revolves around Yertle the Turtle, the king of the pond (located on the faraway island of Sala-ma-sond), where all the turtles swim happily. Dissatisfied with the stone that serves as his throne (it's too small for him to rule the landscape beyond the pond), Yertle commands the other turtles to stack themselves beneath him so that he can see farther and expand his kingdom, each time marveling at what he believes he now rules. However, the stacked turtles are in pain. A turtle named Mack, who has a checkerboard-style shell and is at the bottom of the pile, is bearing the brunt of the suffering. Mack asks Yertle for a respite, but Yertle just tells him to be quiet. Yertle decides to further expand his kingdom and commands more and more turtles to add to his throne and rises above everything he sees. Mack makes a second request for a respite because the increased weight is now causing extreme pain and hunger to the turtles at the bottom of the pile. Again, Yertle yells at Mack to be quiet. Yertle then notices the moon rising above him as the night approaches. Furious, he decides to call for even more turtles in an attempt to rise above it. Before he can give the command, Mack decides he has had enough. He burps, which shakes up Yertle's throne and tosses the turtle king off the turtle stack and into the water, leaving him "King of the Mud" and allowing the others to once again swim free, "as turtles, and maybe all creatures, should be."[1]

Gertrude McFuzz edit

The second story recounts the tale of the "girl-bird" Gertrude McFuzz, who only has one small, plain tail feather and envies Lolla Lee Lou, who has two feathers. She goes to her uncle, Doctor Dake, for something that will make her tail grow. He tries to tell her that her tail is just right for her species, but she throws a tantrum. He gives in, and he tells her where she can find berries that will make her tail grow. The first berry makes her tail exactly like Lolla Lee Lou's, but greed overtakes her. Now wanting to surpass Lolla Lee Lou, she eats the entire vine, causing her tail to grow to an enormous size. But the added weight of too many feathers does not allow her to fly, run, or even walk. Panicked, she yelps repeatedly, while being stuck on the hill. Her uncle, having heard her painful cries for help, sends for many other birds to carry her home and pluck out her tail feathers, which takes a few weeks, causing her to be sore. Though she has only one feather left—as before—she now has "enough, because now she is smarter".[1]

The Big Brag edit

The third and final story tells of a rabbit and a bear, who both boast that they are the "best of the beasts", because of the range of their hearing and smelling abilities, respectively. However, they are humbled by a worm who claims he can see all around the world—right back to his own hill, where he sees the rabbit and bear, whom he calls "the two biggest fools that have ever been seen". Then the worm "dived in his hole and went back to his work".[1]

 
Seuss used similar turtles in an editorial cartoon published in PM on March 20, 1942.

Publication history edit

External videos
  Panel discussion on "Civil and Human Rights Themes in Dr. Seuss' The Sneetches and Yertle the Turtle", New York Law School, March 1, 2013, C-SPAN

A stack of turtles drawn similarly to those featured in "Yertle the Turtle" first appeared on March 20, 1942, in a cartoon for the New York City newspaper PM, where Seuss worked as an editorial cartoonist. The illustration shows two stacks of turtles forming the letter "V" on top of a large turtle labelled "Dawdling Producers", with a caption reading "You Can't Build A Substantial V Out of Turtles!"[2]

Seuss has stated that the titular character Yertle represented Adolf Hitler, with Yertle's despotic rule of the pond and takeover of the surrounding area parallel to Hitler's regime in Germany and invasion of various parts of Europe.[3][4] Though Seuss made a point of not beginning the writing of his stories with a moral in mind, stating that "kids can see a moral coming a mile off", he was not against writing about issues; he said "there's an inherent moral in any story" and remarked that he was "subversive as hell".[5][6] "Yertle the Turtle" has variously been described as "autocratic rule overturned",[7] "a reaction against the fascism of World War II",[8] and "subversive of authoritarian rule".[9]

All three stories in Yertle were originally published in Redbook magazine in the early 1950s, as part of a series of stories that Dr. Seuss wrote for the magazine. These stories proved to be popular, and Geisel decided to put some of them in a book. On September 14, 1956, Geisel signed a contract with Random House for such a book, which would include the story "How Officer Pat Saved the Whole Town" and have the title How Officer Pat Saved the Town and Other Stories. Officer Pat was planned to be published in the autumn of 1957, but it never did get published. On December 18, 1957, the Officer Pat contract was dissolved, and Geisel signed another contract for the publication of Yertle in 1958. The "Officer Pat" story was eventually included in Horton and the Kwuggerbug and More Lost Stories, which was published posthumously in 2014.[10]

The last lines of "Yertle the Turtle" read: "And the turtles, of course ...all the turtles are free / As turtles, and maybe, all creatures should be".[1] When questioned about why he wrote "maybe" rather than "surely", Seuss replied that he did not want to sound "didactic or like a preacher on a platform", and that he wanted the reader "to say 'surely' in their minds instead of my having to say it".[6]

The use of the word "burp"—"plain little Mack did a plain little thing. He burped!"—was also an issue before publication. According to Seuss, the publishers at Random House, including the president, had to meet to decide whether or not they could use "burp" because "nobody had ever burped before on the pages of a children's book".[3][11] However, despite the publishers' initial worries, it eventually proved to be a hit—in 2001, Publishers Weekly reported that it was 125th on the list of best-selling hardcover children's books in the United States, at just over one million copies.[12]

"This Book is for
The Bartletts of Norwich, Vt.
and for
The Sagmasters of Cincinnati, Ohio"

—Dedication, Yertle the Turtle and Other Stories[1]

The book is dedicated to the Sagmaster family as a tribute to Joseph Sagmaster, who had introduced Seuss to his first wife, Helen Palmer, when they were both attending Oxford University. Sagmaster is quoted as saying that bringing the two together was "the happiest inspiration I've ever had".[13]

Adaptations edit

Although Yertle the Turtle and Other Stories has not been directly adapted, several characters from the book have appeared in other media. Yertle is a main antagonist in the first season of the 1996–1998 puppetry television series The Wubbulous World of Dr. Seuss (performed by Anthony Asbury), and in Lynn Ahrens and Stephen Flaherty's Broadway musical Seussical, Yertle serves as a judge and Gertrude McFuzz acts as Horton's love interest. The story was also turned into a dance number in the 1994 film In Search of Dr. Seuss.

Yertle the Turtle and Other Stories is a 1992 animation directed by Ray Messecar and narrated by John Lithgow[14] (later released and cropped to widescreen format on Blu-ray part of Who's Who in the Dr. Seuss?).

The Red Hot Chili Peppers adapted the story in the song "Yertle the Turtle" on their second album, Freaky Styley, released in 1985.

In 1961, RCA Camden Records released "Yertle the Turtle and Other Stories" with the three stories on the A side and "Bartholomew and the Oobleck" on the B side. The liner notes state "set to dramatic action personally by "Dr. Seuss" with music featuring Marvin Miller".[15]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Dr. Seuss (April 12, 1958). Yertle the Turtle and Other Stories. Random House. OCLC 255164.
  2. ^ Minear, Richard (1999). Dr. Seuss Goes to War: The World War II Editorial Cartoons of Theodor Seuss Geisel. The New Press. p. 244. ISBN 978-1-56584-565-7.
  3. ^ a b Geisel, Theodor; Sendak, Maurice (September–October 1989). "Maurice Sendak and Dr. Seuss: A Conversation" (Transcript). Interviewed by Glenn Edward Sadler.
  4. ^ Cynthia Gorney (May 21, 1979). "Dr. Seuss at 75: Grinch, Cat in Hat, Wocket and Generations of Kids in His Pocket". The Washington Post. Washington, D.C. 'I couldn't draw Hitler as a turtle ... So I drew him as King ... of the Pond ... He wanted to be king as far as he could see. So he kept piling them up. He conquered Central Europe and France, and there it was.'
  5. ^ Peter Bunzel (April 6, 1959). "The Wacky World of Dr. Seuss Delights the Child—and Adult—Readers of His Books". Life. ISSN 0024-3019. OCLC 1643958. Most of Geisel's books point a moral, though he insists he never starts with one. 'Kids', he says, 'can see a moral coming a mile off and they gag at it. But there's an inherent moral in any story.'
  6. ^ a b Jonathan Cott (1983). "The Good Dr. Seuss". Pipers at the Gates of Dawn: The Wisdom of Children's Literature. Random House. ISBN 978-0-394-50464-3. OCLC 8728388. 'I qualified that', Geisel explained, 'in order to avoid sounding too didactic or like a preacher on a platform. And I wanted other persons, like yourself, to say "surely" in their minds instead of my having to say it.'
  7. ^ Lurie, Alison (December 20, 1990). "The Cabinet of Dr. Seuss" (Reprint). The New York Review of Books. 37 (20). ISSN 0028-7504. Retrieved May 12, 2008. As in the classical folk tale, pride and prejudice are ridiculed, autocratic rule overturned.
  8. ^ Elizabeth B. Moje; Woan-Ru Shyu (May 1992). "Oh, the Places You've Taken Us: The Reading Teacher's Tribute to Dr. Seuss". The Reading Teacher. 45 (8). ISSN 0034-0561. OCLC 1681346.
  9. ^ Selma G. Lanes (1971). "Seuss for the Goose Is Seuss for the Gander". Down the Rabbit Hole: Adventures and Misadventures in the Realm of Children's Literature. New York City: Atheneum Publishers. OCLC 138227. Sometimes Seuss is simply subversive of authoritarian rule in general, whatever form it takes, as in Yertle the Turtle
  10. ^ Dr. Seuss; Charles D. Cohen (September 9, 2014). "Introduction". Horton and the Kwuggerbug and More Lost Stories. Random House. OCLC 866615089.
  11. ^ Stefan Kanfer (October 7, 1991). "The Doctor Beloved by All". TIME. ISSN 0040-781X. 'I used the word burp, and nobody had ever burped before on the pages of a children's book. It took a decision from the president of the publishing house before my vulgar turtle was permitted to do so.'
  12. ^ Hochman, Debbie Turvey (December 17, 2001). . Publishers Weekly 248.5. Archived from the original on April 4, 2012. Retrieved December 23, 2013.
  13. ^ E. J. Kahn (December 17, 1960). "Children's Friend". The New Yorker. p. 47. ISSN 0028-792X. In the judgement of Sagmaster ... to whose family Dr. Seuss's "Yertle the Turtle" has been appreciatively dedicated, bringing the Geisels together was 'the happiest inspiration I've ever had.'
  14. ^ Yertle the Turtle and Other Stories at IMDb  
  15. ^ Dr. Seuss presents Yertle the Turtle and Other Stories, RCA Camden CAL 1035, 1961, liner notes

yertle, turtle, other, stories, picture, book, collection, theodor, seuss, geisel, published, under, more, commonly, known, pseudonym, seuss, first, released, random, house, books, april, 1958, written, seuss, trademark, style, using, type, meter, called, anap. Yertle the Turtle and Other Stories is a picture book collection by Theodor Seuss Geisel published under his more commonly known pseudonym of Dr Seuss It was first released by Random House Books on April 12 1958 and is written in Seuss s trademark style using a type of meter called anapestic tetrameter Though it contains three short stories it is mostly known for its first story Yertle the Turtle in which the eponymous Yertle king of the pond stands on his subjects in an attempt to reach higher than the Moon until the bottom turtle burps and he falls into the mud ending his rule Yertle the Turtle and Other StoriesAuthorDr SeussCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishGenreChildren s literaturePublished1950 51 Redbook 1958 Random House Media typePrint hardcover OCLC255164Preceded byThe Cat in the Hat Comes Back Followed byHappy Birthday to You Though the book included burp a word then considered to be relatively rude it was a success upon publication and has since sold more than a million copies In 2001 it was listed at 125 on the Publishers Weekly list of the best selling children s books of all time Contents 1 Stories 1 1 Yertle the Turtle 1 2 Gertrude McFuzz 1 3 The Big Brag 2 Publication history 3 Adaptations 4 ReferencesStories editYertle the Turtle edit The eponymous story revolves around Yertle the Turtle the king of the pond located on the faraway island of Sala ma sond where all the turtles swim happily Dissatisfied with the stone that serves as his throne it s too small for him to rule the landscape beyond the pond Yertle commands the other turtles to stack themselves beneath him so that he can see farther and expand his kingdom each time marveling at what he believes he now rules However the stacked turtles are in pain A turtle named Mack who has a checkerboard style shell and is at the bottom of the pile is bearing the brunt of the suffering Mack asks Yertle for a respite but Yertle just tells him to be quiet Yertle decides to further expand his kingdom and commands more and more turtles to add to his throne and rises above everything he sees Mack makes a second request for a respite because the increased weight is now causing extreme pain and hunger to the turtles at the bottom of the pile Again Yertle yells at Mack to be quiet Yertle then notices the moon rising above him as the night approaches Furious he decides to call for even more turtles in an attempt to rise above it Before he can give the command Mack decides he has had enough He burps which shakes up Yertle s throne and tosses the turtle king off the turtle stack and into the water leaving him King of the Mud and allowing the others to once again swim free as turtles and maybe all creatures should be 1 Gertrude McFuzz edit The second story recounts the tale of the girl bird Gertrude McFuzz who only has one small plain tail feather and envies Lolla Lee Lou who has two feathers She goes to her uncle Doctor Dake for something that will make her tail grow He tries to tell her that her tail is just right for her species but she throws a tantrum He gives in and he tells her where she can find berries that will make her tail grow The first berry makes her tail exactly like Lolla Lee Lou s but greed overtakes her Now wanting to surpass Lolla Lee Lou she eats the entire vine causing her tail to grow to an enormous size But the added weight of too many feathers does not allow her to fly run or even walk Panicked she yelps repeatedly while being stuck on the hill Her uncle having heard her painful cries for help sends for many other birds to carry her home and pluck out her tail feathers which takes a few weeks causing her to be sore Though she has only one feather left as before she now has enough because now she is smarter 1 The Big Brag edit The third and final story tells of a rabbit and a bear who both boast that they are the best of the beasts because of the range of their hearing and smelling abilities respectively However they are humbled by a worm who claims he can see all around the world right back to his own hill where he sees the rabbit and bear whom he calls the two biggest fools that have ever been seen Then the worm dived in his hole and went back to his work 1 nbsp Seuss used similar turtles in an editorial cartoon published in PM on March 20 1942 Publication history editExternal videos nbsp Panel discussion on Civil and Human Rights Themes in Dr Seuss The Sneetches and Yertle the Turtle New York Law School March 1 2013 C SPAN A stack of turtles drawn similarly to those featured in Yertle the Turtle first appeared on March 20 1942 in a cartoon for the New York City newspaper PM where Seuss worked as an editorial cartoonist The illustration shows two stacks of turtles forming the letter V on top of a large turtle labelled Dawdling Producers with a caption reading You Can t Build A Substantial V Out of Turtles 2 Seuss has stated that the titular character Yertle represented Adolf Hitler with Yertle s despotic rule of the pond and takeover of the surrounding area parallel to Hitler s regime in Germany and invasion of various parts of Europe 3 4 Though Seuss made a point of not beginning the writing of his stories with a moral in mind stating that kids can see a moral coming a mile off he was not against writing about issues he said there s an inherent moral in any story and remarked that he was subversive as hell 5 6 Yertle the Turtle has variously been described as autocratic rule overturned 7 a reaction against the fascism of World War II 8 and subversive of authoritarian rule 9 All three stories in Yertle were originally published in Redbook magazine in the early 1950s as part of a series of stories that Dr Seuss wrote for the magazine These stories proved to be popular and Geisel decided to put some of them in a book On September 14 1956 Geisel signed a contract with Random House for such a book which would include the story How Officer Pat Saved the Whole Town and have the title How Officer Pat Saved the Town and Other Stories Officer Pat was planned to be published in the autumn of 1957 but it never did get published On December 18 1957 the Officer Pat contract was dissolved and Geisel signed another contract for the publication of Yertle in 1958 The Officer Pat story was eventually included in Horton and the Kwuggerbug and More Lost Stories which was published posthumously in 2014 10 The last lines of Yertle the Turtle read And the turtles of course all the turtles are free As turtles and maybe all creatures should be 1 When questioned about why he wrote maybe rather than surely Seuss replied that he did not want to sound didactic or like a preacher on a platform and that he wanted the reader to say surely in their minds instead of my having to say it 6 The use of the word burp plain little Mack did a plain little thing He burped was also an issue before publication According to Seuss the publishers at Random House including the president had to meet to decide whether or not they could use burp because nobody had ever burped before on the pages of a children s book 3 11 However despite the publishers initial worries it eventually proved to be a hit in 2001 Publishers Weekly reported that it was 125th on the list of best selling hardcover children s books in the United States at just over one million copies 12 This Book is forThe Bartletts of Norwich Vt and forThe Sagmasters of Cincinnati Ohio Dedication Yertle the Turtle and Other Stories 1 The book is dedicated to the Sagmaster family as a tribute to Joseph Sagmaster who had introduced Seuss to his first wife Helen Palmer when they were both attending Oxford University Sagmaster is quoted as saying that bringing the two together was the happiest inspiration I ve ever had 13 Adaptations editAlthough Yertle the Turtle and Other Stories has not been directly adapted several characters from the book have appeared in other media Yertle is a main antagonist in the first season of the 1996 1998 puppetry television series The Wubbulous World of Dr Seuss performed by Anthony Asbury and in Lynn Ahrens and Stephen Flaherty s Broadway musical Seussical Yertle serves as a judge and Gertrude McFuzz acts as Horton s love interest The story was also turned into a dance number in the 1994 film In Search of Dr Seuss Yertle the Turtle and Other Stories is a 1992 animation directed by Ray Messecar and narrated by John Lithgow 14 later released and cropped to widescreen format on Blu ray part of Who s Who in the Dr Seuss The Red Hot Chili Peppers adapted the story in the song Yertle the Turtle on their second album Freaky Styley released in 1985 In 1961 RCA Camden Records released Yertle the Turtle and Other Stories with the three stories on the A side and Bartholomew and the Oobleck on the B side The liner notes state set to dramatic action personally by Dr Seuss with music featuring Marvin Miller 15 References edit a b c d e Dr Seuss April 12 1958 Yertle the Turtle and Other Stories Random House OCLC 255164 Minear Richard 1999 Dr Seuss Goes to War The World War II Editorial Cartoons of Theodor Seuss Geisel The New Press p 244 ISBN 978 1 56584 565 7 a b Geisel Theodor Sendak Maurice September October 1989 Maurice Sendak and Dr Seuss A Conversation Transcript Interviewed by Glenn Edward Sadler Cynthia Gorney May 21 1979 Dr Seuss at 75 Grinch Cat in Hat Wocket and Generations of Kids in His Pocket The Washington Post Washington D C I couldn t draw Hitler as a turtle So I drew him as King of the Pond He wanted to be king as far as he could see So he kept piling them up He conquered Central Europe and France and there it was Peter Bunzel April 6 1959 The Wacky World of Dr Seuss Delights the Child and Adult Readers of His Books Life ISSN 0024 3019 OCLC 1643958 Most of Geisel s books point a moral though he insists he never starts with one Kids he says can see a moral coming a mile off and they gag at it But there s an inherent moral in any story a b Jonathan Cott 1983 The Good Dr Seuss Pipers at the Gates of Dawn The Wisdom of Children s Literature Random House ISBN 978 0 394 50464 3 OCLC 8728388 I qualified that Geisel explained in order to avoid sounding too didactic or like a preacher on a platform And I wanted other persons like yourself to say surely in their minds instead of my having to say it Lurie Alison December 20 1990 The Cabinet of Dr Seuss Reprint The New York Review of Books 37 20 ISSN 0028 7504 Retrieved May 12 2008 As in the classical folk tale pride and prejudice are ridiculed autocratic rule overturned Elizabeth B Moje Woan Ru Shyu May 1992 Oh the Places You ve Taken Us The Reading Teacher s Tribute to Dr Seuss The Reading Teacher 45 8 ISSN 0034 0561 OCLC 1681346 Selma G Lanes 1971 Seuss for the Goose Is Seuss for the Gander Down the Rabbit Hole Adventures and Misadventures in the Realm of Children s Literature New York City Atheneum Publishers OCLC 138227 Sometimes Seuss is simply subversive of authoritarian rule in general whatever form it takes as in Yertle the Turtle Dr Seuss Charles D Cohen September 9 2014 Introduction Horton and the Kwuggerbug and More Lost Stories Random House OCLC 866615089 Stefan Kanfer October 7 1991 The Doctor Beloved by All TIME ISSN 0040 781X I used the word burp and nobody had ever burped before on the pages of a children s book It took a decision from the president of the publishing house before my vulgar turtle was permitted to do so Hochman Debbie Turvey December 17 2001 All Time Bestselling Children s Books Publishers Weekly 248 5 Archived from the original on April 4 2012 Retrieved December 23 2013 E J Kahn December 17 1960 Children s Friend The New Yorker p 47 ISSN 0028 792X In the judgement of Sagmaster to whose family Dr Seuss s Yertle the Turtle has been appreciatively dedicated bringing the Geisels together was the happiest inspiration I ve ever had Yertle the Turtle and Other Stories at IMDb nbsp Dr Seuss presents Yertle the Turtle and Other Stories RCA Camden CAL 1035 1961 liner notes Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Yertle the Turtle and Other Stories amp oldid 1224027816, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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