Pooh and the psychologists

No cover

John T. Williams: Pooh and the psychologists (2002, Egmont)

200 pages

English language

Published May 14, 2002 by Egmont.

ISBN:
978-0-416-20044-7
Copied ISBN!

View on OpenLibrary

3 stars (1 review)

4 editions

Review of 'Pooh and the Psychologists' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

Cute, although a little—okay a lot forced. I know it’s fun to run with the Pooh-as-paragon-of-X idea for many values of X (Taoist, philosopher, database designer), but there really just isn’t enough material in any of those for a book. It wears thin: cute & clever becomes tedious and pompous. I found myself eagerly searching for signs of authorial self-recognition in Case 6, the one on bombastic old Owl. Looking for a wink to the reader. Nope, didn’t find one.

Even with that, I enjoyed the book. Williams treats Milne and his characters with respect and kindness. And he does offer a fresh new lens for me to view Pooh with on my next rereading — a lens I actually like. One that shines light on Milne himself and why his books resonate so deeply with so many of us.

This is a good book for a Pooh aficionad@. …

Subjects

  • Milne, A. A. -- 1882-1956 -- Knowledge.
  • Winnie-the-Pooh (Fictitious character)
  • Psychology in literature.
  • Children's stories, English -- History and criticism.
  • Teddy bears in literature.
  • Psychological fiction, English -- History and criticism.