欧宝娱乐

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卮丕夭丿賴 讴賵趩賵賱賵

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A pilot stranded in the desert awakes one morning to see, standing before him, the most extraordinary little fellow. "Please," asks the stranger, "draw me a sheep." And the pilot realizes that when life's events are too difficult to understand, there is no choice but to succumb to their mysteries. He pulls out pencil and paper... And thus begins this wise and enchanting fable that, in teaching the secret of what is really important in life, has changed forever the world for its readers.

Few stories are as widely read and as universally cherished by children and adults alike as The Little Prince, presented here in a stunning new translation with carefully restored artwork. The definitive edition of a worldwide classic, it will capture the hearts of readers of all ages.

First published April 6, 1943

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About the author

Antoine de Saint-Exup茅ry

1,351books8,482followers
People best know French writer and aviator Antoine de Saint-Exup茅ry for his fairy tale The Little Prince (1943).

He flew for the first time at the age of 12 years in 1912 at the Amb茅rieu airfield and then determined to a pilot. Even after moving to a school in Switzerland and spending summer vacations at the ch芒teau of the family at Saint-Maurice-de-R茅mens in east, he kept that ambition. He repeatedly uses the house at Saint-Maurice.

Later, in Paris, he failed the entrance exams for the naval academy and instead enrolled at the prestigious l'Ecole des Beaux-Arts. In 1921, Saint-Exup茅ry, stationed in Strasbourg, began serving in the military. He learned and forever settled his career path as a pilot. After leaving the service in 1923, Saint-Exup茅ry worked in several professions but in 1926 went back and signed as a pilot for A茅ropostale, a private airline that from Toulouse flew mail to Dakar, Senegal. In 1927, Saint-Exup茅ry accepted the position of airfield chief for Cape Juby in southern Morocco and began his first book, a memoir, called Southern Mail and published in 1929.

He then moved briefly to Buenos Aires to oversee the establishment of an Argentinean mail service, returned to Paris in 1931, and then published Night Flight , which won instant success and the prestigious Prix Femina. Always daring Saint-Exup茅ry tried from Paris in 1935 to break the speed record for flying to Saigon. Unfortunately, his plane crashed in the Libyan Desert, and he and his copilot trudged through the sand for three days to find help. In 1938, a second plane crash at that time, as he tried to fly between city of New York and Tierra del Fuego, Argentina, seriously injured him. The crash resulted in a long convalescence in New York.

He published Wind, Sand and Stars , next novel, in 1939. This great success won the grand prize for novel of the academy and the national book award in the United States. Saint-Exup茅ry flew reconnaissance missions at the beginning of the Second World War but went to New York to ask the United States for help when the Germans occupied his country. He drew on his wartime experiences to publish Flight to Arras and Letter to a Hostage in 1942.

Later in 1943, Saint-Exup茅ry rejoined his air squadron in northern Africa. From earlier plane crashes, Saint-Exup茅ry still suffered physically, and people forbade him to fly, but he insisted on a mission. From Borgo, Corsica, on 31 July 1944, he set to overfly occupied region. He never returned.

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Profile Image for Nataliya.
938 reviews15.4k followers
March 17, 2023
*** For those who somehow have no idea about what happens in The Little Prince or cannot figure it out at a reasonable spot in the book, here is a warning - THERE WILL BE, as much as I hate applying this term to this incredibly famous classic that does not rely on Aha! moments to keep the readers' attention, SPOILERS! ****


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'You do understand that the Little Prince died?' my mother asked as carefully and gently as only adults who know that loss of innocence can be crushing but is brutally necessary can do.

'No, he didn't. He went back to his home planet and that stupid rose. It says so right here,' I replied with the comforting stubbornness of an eight-year-old.

Later that night, I quietly reread the book and the sad truth clicked, and so did the belated thought that for all the gentle berating of adults in it, this strange and beautiful book was written by one of them and definitely for them, and not for me, and by luring me in with the beautiful pictures it pushed me just a bit further on the inevitable road to adulthood.

Or so I see now.

Back then, I decided to read the author's biography instead as a distraction from the thoughts that were trying to be a bit more grown-up than my heart cared for - I was the odd kid of a literature teacher mother, after all - just to learn that just after writing this book, Antoine de Saint Exupery died when flying his plane in a war to liberate his country, killed by adults who played a game of war, too dangerous and cruel. And that finally made me cry.

And then I went back to the simple security of childhood.

Then I grew up, inevitably, like most of us do. I learned to do my fair share of 'matters of consequence'. I learned the painful understanding of why certain vain but naive roses can hold such sad power over our hearts. I learned the comfort and longing of nostalgia, the fear of the crushing burden of loneliness, the understanding of fragile beauty of the world that can be so easily taken away at any moment. I became a grown-up, and I have to learn to reconcile my inner child with my outer age.
"In the course of this life I have had a great many encounters with a great many people who have been concerned with matters of consequence. I have lived a great deal among grown-ups. I have seen them intimately, close at hand. And that hasn't much improved my opinion of them."
Now, reading this intensely lyrical and mesmerizing book written by an ailing middle-aged adult far away from the country he loved in the middle of war-torn years, I am confronted with emotions that ruthlessly hurt, hidden in the deceiving simplicity of a (supposedly) children's story just like an elephant was hidden inside a boa constrictor - or was it simply a hat all along? - in the opening paragraphs of this book. I sigh and tear up, and try to resist the urge to pick up the golden-haired child that never stopped until he got answers to his questions and carry him away into safety. But I can't. Because if I do so, there will never be 500 billion bells in the stars, and we will never wonder whether the rose is still alive - and it needs to be, because we are responsible for those we have tamed.
"But I was not reassured. I remembered the fox. One runs the risk of weeping a little, if one lets himself be tamed."
This is not a book for children. It's for adults who remember being children and feel nostalgia for the simple comfort of childhood innocence but know they can never go back to it. Because they have met their Roses, and Foxes, and drank from a well with a rusty handle in the desert, and learned that a few thorns may not stand against the claws of a tiger. Unlike the Little Prince, they can no longer go back - but they can look at the night starry sky and laugh, and imagine that they hear an answering clear laughter.
"In certain more important details I shall make mistakes, also. But that is something that will not be my fault. My friend never explained anything to me. He thought, perhaps, that I was like himself. But I, alas, do not know how to see sheep through the walls of boxes. Perhaps I am a little like the grown-ups. I have had to grow old."



'What makes the desert beautiful,' said the little prince, 'is that somewhere it hides a well.'

鈥斺赌斺赌斺赌斺赌斺赌�
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Profile Image for Lisa of Troy.
882 reviews7,421 followers
August 12, 2024
The Little Prince is a short story of a man who crash lands his plane in a remote part of the desert. The man meets a little fellow, The Little Prince, who regales him with his tales of his travels around the universe.

This was a short book that carried a big punch. Although it is often labeled as a children鈥檚 story, it is so full of beautiful symbolism. The Little Prince is worth reading once a year.

My favorite tale from The Little Prince鈥檚 travel is the story of the businessman. The businessman is busy counting the stars, claiming to own them because he first discovered them. The Little Prince asks him what he does with the stars, and the businessman says nothing.

鈥淚 own a flower myself,鈥� he (The Little Prince) continued, 鈥渨hich I water every day. I own three volcanoes, which I rake out every week. I even rake out the extinct one. You never know. So it鈥檚 of some use to my volcanoes, and it鈥檚 useful to my flower, that I own them. But you鈥檙e not useful to the stars.鈥�

There was another quote that I just loved: 鈥淚 need to put up with two or three caterpillars if I want to get to know the butterflies.鈥�

This book is part of the 100 Books To Read According to the BBC:


2025 Reading Schedule
Jan A Town Like Alice
Feb Birdsong
Mar Captain Corelli's Mandolin - Louis De Berniere
Apr War and Peace
May The Woman in White
Jun Atonement
Jul The Shadow of the Wind
Aug Jude the Obscure
Sep Ulysses
Oct Vanity Fair
Nov A Fine Balance
Dec Germinal

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Profile Image for Manny.
Author听42 books15.8k followers
March 7, 2015
The next asteroid the Little Prince came to was inhabited by a Quiz Addict. He sat hunched in front of his laptop, and barely looked up when the Little Prince greeted him. There was nowhere else to sit, since the whole asteroid was covered in books.

"Good morning!" said the Little Prince.

"I'm sorry, I don't have time to talk to you," said the Quiz Addict. "I am very busy. Wait. In Twilight, what color was Edward's car?"

"I don't know," said the Little Prince. "I have never read this book Twilight."

"I think it was blue," said the man. "Damn! I was wrong. Silver. In Twilight, who joined the Cullen family first?"

"I told you," said the Little Prince, "that I haven't read this book. But it must be an interesting book if you answer questions about it all day long. I would very much like to read it."

"It is the stupidest book ever written!" said the man.

"Then why do you answer questions about it all day long?" asked the Little Prince.

"Because if I don't," sighed the man, "then my friend on asteroid B451 will get ahead of me. "He has read the whole series. Luckily, he hasn't read Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows."

"When you have finished the Quiz," asked the Little Prince, "I hope you will be able to read some of these books you have around you? I notice that you have had Atonement on your to-read list for the last six months."

"It is a Never-Ending Quiz," answered the man. "In Twilight, what color was Edward's car?"

"I believe you said silver?" answered the Little Prince politely.

"Thank you," muttered the man. "Yes! You were right. I should have known that."

"I'm sorry, I must be going," said the Little Prince. And he went on his way, thinking that grown-ups were very, very, very strange.
Profile Image for Kevin Kelsey.
437 reviews2,358 followers
February 6, 2022
Great observations, but personally I think it's overrated. It practically begs the reader to come to the conclusion that if you don't "get it" it's your own fault because you're a "grown up, and only kids can see what matters." It's heavy handed, clumsily executed observations on what's important in life. It's not wrong by any means, but it's kind of pseudo-intellectualist.

I'm going to go with a literal interpretation of the plot, because it's more fun that way:

A man crashes his plane in the desert, hallucinates a small alien boy that teaches him philosophical lessons, invents a history for him, finds a well just in time to stave off dehydration, as he re-hydrates, his hallucinated alien friend kills himself and disappears, he fixes his plane and flies home and is sad about it, but feels blessed for the experience as it has changed him.


Ready for the moral? It's really simple:
"It is the time you have wasted for your rose that makes your rose so important." Or in other words, spend your time developing relationships, don't worry so much about the things, they're not important, it's the time you spend and how you spend it that is.

That's a nice philosophy, I get it. I even agree with it one hundred percent. I just think these metaphors are painfully clumsy.
Profile Image for Erin.
47 reviews130 followers
April 14, 2020
We are all children in adult bodies. Yes we are, don't think we aren't for one moment. The fact that we WERE, indeed, children, is a huge part of each of us. It is possible to shed a few appreciative tears on every page of this book if you entertain the thought that the pilot IS The Little Prince. Maybe you won't think that--maybe you'll have your own take on the book---that's the magic about it. This book is translated to English from French. If you understand and/or appreciate French, the deliciousness of that fact can affect you in addition to the sweet storyline itself. The book won't even take you a whole day to read. Consider honoring the Little You that still remains, and resides within you, and read this salute to childhood, to innocence, and to you. It just takes a 'Little' imagination and bravery.
Profile Image for emma.
2,440 reviews85.2k followers
September 18, 2024
鈥淎nd now here is my secret, a very simple secret: It is only with the heart that one can see rightly; what is essential is invisible to the eye.鈥�

i find it almost impossible to write on this book at all, let alone extensively enough to constitute a review. it's just so lovely and wonderful, and it really seems like one of those books that reveals another facet with every reading.

(it was just as delightful the second and third read as the first, and nearly as great in english as in french.)

i just...love it.

but here's my attempt:
this might be in my top five favorite books ever.

that should really be all I have to say to convince you to read it. but in case you need more, i will provide. (no one can say i don鈥檛 give, guys.)

first, it鈥檚 unbelievably short. if you need more than one sitting to read this book, Something Is Wrong. or perhaps you are reading it aloud to a newborn who cries a lot, or a very poorly behaved adult, in which case I suppose it鈥檚 understandable.

no excuse for children. they should be enchanted from the get-go.

the language is also unbelievably lovely.

it鈥檚 also incredibly profound. there are countless morals and metaphors and meanings to this book (check out that alliteration). i catch something new with each read. there鈥檚 so much imagination appreciation in this book. also star and flower appreciation, and those are two of the things that make life the most worth living. and books of course. and this book IS a book! three for three! (it misses on another reason to live, which is sweets, but you can鈥檛 win them all.)

the author鈥檚 name is Antoine de Saint Exup茅ry, which is one of the cooler names I鈥檝e ever heard. when de Saint Exup茅ry wrote this, he was a sad and lonely frenchman in new york, with a vain and beautiful wife whom he loved very much. a lot of really deft analysis of the human experience, including some truly hot takes on american city types. (it鈥檚 better than I鈥檓 making it sound.)

most importantly, THIS BOOK IS TOTALLY ALL TRUE. 100% nonfiction, baby.

the narrator of this book is a pilot who crash-lands in the desert, where he meets the little prince. Antoine de Saint Exup茅ry was presumed dead after his plane (and he) went missing over the ocean. the plane was found, BUT HIS BODY NEVER WAS. the obvious conclusion is that he鈥檚 in the stars with the little prince.

bottom line: children's classics supremacy.
Profile Image for Federico DN.
925 reviews3,576 followers
October 20, 2023
鈥淲hat is essential is invisible to the eyes.鈥�

Saint-Exup茅ry鈥檚 plane crashes in the middle of the Sahara desert; with limited supplies and no hopes of finding help, his time is short to fix his airship. One day after waking up he finds a beautiful young boy playing on the sand, and starts to wonder if he may be losing his mind. Is he dehydrated and the boy a product of his imagination? Who is that little boy and what on earth is he doing in the middle of the desert? And why does he keeps asking to draw him a sheep?

One of the firsts books I picked up from my parent鈥檚 bookcase, if not the very first. A book I read during my teens and deeply LOVED, with a soul shattering ending that I never fully recovered from. To this day I think this is the first book I read with a devastating ending.

A book everyone should try to read at least once in their lifetime, but never force it. I think it鈥檚 essential for this book to come just at the right invisible time, and very important to keep an open mind about it. Don鈥檛 over analyze it too much, and it should be easy to enjoy. I think any kid can love it, or any adult with a healthy child at heart.

A must read in life. Extremely Recommendable.

*** The Little Prince (2015) is a beautifully touching movie that has much and little to do with the original work. This film is more of a modern retelling of what 鈥楾he Little Prince 1 & 2鈥� would鈥檝e been, if such a sequel existed. Still, of all the adaptations I鈥檝e watched (which is to say the only one in this case ehem), it鈥檚 so VERY worth it. An extremely heartfelt animation and something any reader of the Little Prince would probably love. A fantastic film with gorgeous artwork and an amazing voicing cast. Very Recommendable. Just mind it includes a lot more stuff than just a plain adaptation.



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PERSONAL NOTE :
[1943] [96p] [Classics] [Extremely Recommendable] [B 612]
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鈥淟o esencial es invisible a los ojos.鈥�

El avi贸n de Saint-Exup茅ry se estrella en medio del desierto del Sahara; con escasos recursos y sin esperanza de hallar ayuda, su tiempo es corto para tratar de arreglar su nave. Un d铆a al despertar se encuentra con un hermoso joven muchacho jugando en la arena, y se empieza a preguntar si tal vez est茅 perdiendo la cabeza. 驴Est谩 deshidratado y el ni帽o un producto de su imaginaci贸n? 驴Qui茅n es ese muchachito y qu茅 por los cielos est谩 haciendo en el medio del desierto? 驴Y por qu茅 sigue insistiendo en que le dibuje una oveja?

Este fue uno de los primeros libros que escog铆 de la biblioteca de mis viejos, si no es que el mism铆simo primero. Un libro que le铆 durante mi adolescencia y AME profundamente, con un final que parte el alma y del cual nunca llegu茅 a recuperarme completamente. Hasta el d铆a de hoy creo que es el primer libro que le铆 con un final devastador.

Un libro que todo el mundo deber铆a intentar leer al menos una vez en la vida, pero sin jam谩s forzarlo. Creo que es esencial que este libro llegue justo en el invisible momento adecuado, y muy importante leerlo con una mente abierta. No sobre analizarlo demasiado, y seguramente ser谩 f谩cil disfrutarlo. Creo que cualquier ni帽o puede amarlo, o cualquier adulto con un ni帽o saludable en su interior.

Un deber para leer en la vida. Extremadamente Recomendable.

*** El Principito (2015) es una hermosamente conmovedora pel铆cula que tiene mucho y poco que ver con la obra original. Este filme es una especie de recreaci贸n moderna de lo que ser铆a 鈥楨l Principito 1 & 2鈥�, si dicha secuela existiera. Igual, de todas las adaptaciones que vi (que dicho sea de paso es una sola en este caso ehem), esta lo vale MUCHO. Una extremadamente emotiva pel铆cula animada y algo que cualquier lector del Principito probablemente amar铆a. Una fant谩stica y bell铆sima obra art铆stica con un excelente elenco de voces. Muy Recomendable. S贸lo sepan que incluye muchas m谩s cosas que una simple adaptaci贸n.



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NOTA PERSONAL :
[1943] [96p] [Cl谩sicos] [Extremadamente Recomendable] [B 612]
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Profile Image for jessica.
2,637 reviews46.9k followers
February 8, 2019
'one sees clearly only with the heart.'

sometimes i fall into a mood where i am simply tired of life. where i just want to crawl under the duvet with a cup of tea, hug a book and never let go. 'the little prince' is that book for me. its a truly special treasure. its precious. its my rose.
___________________________________

芦on ne voit bien qu'avec le c艙ur.禄

parfois, je deviens fatigu茅 de la vie. et je veux ramper sous la couette avec une tasse de th茅, embrasser un livre et ne jamais l芒cher. 芦le petit prince禄 est ce livre pour moi. c'est un tr茅sor sp茅cial. c'est pr茅cieux. c'est ma rose.

鈫� 5 stars
Profile Image for Mario the lone bookwolf.
805 reviews5,165 followers
July 7, 2023
Starting the avalanche of sophisticated children麓s books

With a bang so loud that it麓s hard to top
The density of philosophical insights, innuendos, and connotations is so immense that one can麓t find just one interpretation, but tons of them. It subjectively depends on what one麓s ideology is to imagine what the different characters and actions could mean. Because besides the

Obvious criticism of the destruction of childhood imagination and creativity by indoctrination and conformity
One could put on a political, sociological, economic, ethical, psychological, etc hat and start guessing what snake, prince, pilot, child pilot flashback, different humans, the asteroid, etc. mean. Not just Saint Exupery delivered different options when talking about his work, but loads of wise people reading and reviewing it too.

Many other classics can widely be defined with one interpretation
but that麓s definitively not the case here. One is left with a universe of possible ways to expand one麓s thoughts, which is also the reason why this concept has been copied so many times in books and graphic novels. The seemingly trivial, short, and superficial works are so much more than they seem, they do the same service as very good satire. They

Enlighten kids even more and try to open the ossified minds of the adults
Because one has to face it. After reading, again, one more of these short stories, novellas, and sometimes even full novels, one goes into New Years麓Eve good resolutions mode. 鈥濱麓ll change my mindset, check my cognitive biases, be more objective towards my own beliefs, yada yada yada.鈥� What麓s mostly left after days and weeks is that one is still the same, stubborn, bigoted adult scarred by nature and, by this work, perfectly owned and ridiculed nurture and education.

Tropes show how literature is conceptualized and created and which mixture of elements makes works and genres unique:
Profile Image for Julie G.
986 reviews3,731 followers
April 3, 2019
The Little Prince is the one book of my childhood that truly wrecked me. Wrecked me, irrevocably.

It is the one story that I swore I'd never read again.

I didn't. I hadn't. I never read it to my son, either.

Then, last week, my middle child, my oldest daughter, discovered the 2015 film of it, and came to me, sobbing, and said, 鈥淢ommy, you've just got to watch this movie. It's so beautiful.鈥�

I did. I watched it. It was a good movie, but, as usual, they added parts, they took away parts, they created violence where it wasn't necessary, etc. So, purist that I am, I marched into the library, checked out the book and told my girls, 鈥淚f you're going to know a story, then learn the original version.鈥�

My hands were shaking this weekend, as I cracked the cover to read it, and the first thing I did was read the backflap, where I was reminded that the author himself went missing a year after the book was published in 1943. I immediately pictured Antoine De Saint-Exupery in his little airplane, crashing somewhere, alone, in the Mediterranean Sea. Pretty disturbing, if you know the premise of this fictional story. The tears started early.

I don't know what it is about these desert stories, but they wreck me, every time. I have never cried harder than after watching Ralph Fiennes in that red airplane, flying over the desert in The English Patient, or after meeting Claudia, in Moon Tiger, and realizing what she has lost, what she will never find again, in those desert sands.

The desert seems to magnify desolation, naturally, by its isolation. It can be a setting for great reflection, great stories, and even greater loss. And, it is here in this desert setting that our crashed pilot meets the little prince, whose life experiences illuminate almost every important lesson we could learn in a lifetime.

Of course I was crying again, but in a good way.

I could just sit here, adding quote after quote from this book on this review. I could advise all men that everything they need to know about women is available to them in the passages between the little prince and the rose. I could advise all parents of young children that this is one of those rare books that reminds you how precious and fleeting your time is with your kids.

But, 鈥渓anguage is the source of misunderstandings,鈥� and I'd be better served to invite you to crash in the desert yourself. See if the little prince shows up to speak to you. See what he has to say.
Profile Image for chloe.
263 reviews29k followers
October 12, 2021
4th read: October 2021
buddy read with caitlin bunny <3

3rd read: August 2017

2nd read: June 2017
I just can't get over this book. It is absolutely stunning.

This is a book I will continuously re-read throughout my life, and is especially great to read when you are becoming too consumed in the adult world. I'm in my exam period currently, so reading this now was perfect.

I also listened to the audio book for this re-read, and the narrator was perfect for this story (and he is Australian!)
Profile Image for Stephen.
1,516 reviews12.1k followers
December 5, 2011
A "Daddy/Daughter nighttime reading hour" review

This was a toughy for me to review. I wasn't sure of the best perspective from which to provide comments so as to be of assistance to my fellow readers since this is a children's book (rather than YA which would be reviewed purely on its own merits). After a short session of "what should I do," I bravely decided to punt, figuring that there are already more than enough excellent reviews of this without my clogging up the cyber arteries with another one. Therefore, I decided simply to share my experience of reading/listening to the book with my daughter along with a couple of thoughts on the concepts discussed in the story and hope that you can take something useful from it.

So as part of our nightly routine, my youngest daughter, Sydney, and I have daddy/princess read time. The other night, she and I listened to the audio version of The Little Prince while we read along with a copy of the book. As usual, it was an AMAZING experience. I am convinced that I learn more about the stories we read from her and her reactions to the narrative than she does from me...and I love it.

It's only a two hour audio (86 pages) and yet the two of us spent close to 4 hours listening and talking about the various chapters in the story (plus a brief 15 minute break for Mom to give her a bath while Dad helped big sister Kenzie with her math homework). Sydney had all kinds of questions (some just hysterically funny in how much sense they made from a kid-centric view of the world). We would stop the story after each planet or character to talk about what she thought the story meant and what messages the story was trying to deliver.
For those of you with children, you know how wonderful this can be and I was on the ninth cloud watching my little girl ponder over the book.

From this perspective, the story was perfect and deserves an easy 5 stars. However, since it's not very helpful to rate a book based on that kind of non-transferable experience, I didn't want to rely solely on that for its final rating.

After explaining to Syd the goodreads star system, she would give this 4 stars as she really liked the British accent of the narrator and the crazy adventures the Prince experiences on the various planets. BTW, from Sydney's point of view, 4 stars is the absolute ceiling for any book dealing with ickies like boys and this would easily earn 5 stars had the story been called the "The Little Princess." Princes are still second class citizens at this stage in her life...and Dad is oh, oh, OH so perfectly fine with that).

For me, looking at this sans Sydney, I liked it but was not smitten with it enough to go higher than 3 stars. The story is well written and has something to say about the human condition and how people spend too much of their lives focusing on the wrong things and not enough time enjoying where they are. A nice message and one I was happy to expose Sydney to, but I was not always enamored with the path the author took to get there.

Overall, a good read on its own and a potentially a great experience if shared with your children...as most things in life are.

3.5 stars.
Profile Image for Steven Medina.
250 reviews1,267 followers
February 24, 2021
Uno de los peores libros que he le铆do en mi vida, experiencia desastrosa.

Calificaci贸n real: 0

El principito, al igual que otros libros de la misma tem谩tica que buscan ayudarnos a conectarnos con nuestro ni帽o interior, es una de esas obras que se recomiendan leer en nuestra infancia pero sobretodo en nuestra adultez. Cuando somos ni帽os no tenemos responsabilidades, jugamos todo el tiempo y nos la pasamos descubriendo el mundo que nos rodea 鈥攐 por lo menos si hemos tenido la fortuna de vivir una buena infancia鈥�; pero, cuando nos convertimos en adultos y nos acostumbramos a ese tipo de vida, tarde que temprano llegar谩 el momento en que nos sentiremos atrapados en la cotidianidad, estresados por los millones de problemas que se presentan diariamente, y angustiados por lo que puede deparar nuestro futuro. Y claro, si estamos en ese estado de lamentaci贸n, libros como El principito 鈥攁l igual que los libros de autoayuda鈥� aparecen como la cura milagrosa de nuestros problemas y de la infelicidad que sentimos d铆a tras d铆a. Y no es que eso sea negativo, al contrario, independientemente de si nos gusta, o no leer, los libros son nuestros amigos. Si uno de ellos te ayuda a sentir paz interior o felicidad significar谩 que ese libro es apropiado para ti, sin importar su calidad. Personalmente, pienso que esa ha sido la raz贸n para que El principito tuviera el 茅xito y la popularidad de la que ha gozado a lo largo de los a帽os: La infelicidad de sus lectores. Sin embargo, si somos neutrales y calificamos este libro por su calidad y no por nuestra emotividad, entenderemos que verdaderamente El principito es un libro p茅simo en todo el sentido de la palabra.

Mi experiencia con este libro comenz贸 a los nueve a帽os cuando cursaba quinto de primaria. Era el mes de junio y como todo ni帽o ansiaba la llegada de las vacaciones de mitad de a帽o para no tener que madrugar por algunos d铆as. Y s铆, claro que llegaron las vacaciones, pero lo hicieron en compa帽铆a de varios trabajos largos y tediosos que deb铆a entregar una vez regresara a clases. Uno de esos trabajos constaba en leer El principito y realizar un resumen de cuatro p谩ginas en hojas tama帽o carta: Parec铆a un trabajo f谩cil. No obstante, mi dolor de cabeza comenz贸, cuando termin茅 de leerlo y me percat茅 de que no hab铆a entendido absolutamente nada, a pesar de que era un buen estudiante y entend铆a r谩pidamente cualquier tema. Me sent铆 desesperado porque ya no dispon铆a de tiempo de releerlo, pero, afortunadamente mis hermanos me vieron en apuros y me ayudaron a resolver mi problema... de hecho, ellos me hicieron la tarea. D铆as despu茅s, recib铆 una buena nota por 芦mi禄 trabajo pero internamente me sent铆 mediocre por no ser capaz de hacer esa tarea. Pas贸 el tiempo y olvid茅 el tema, pero, en lo m谩s profundo de mi subconsciente sobrevivi贸 el sentimiento de fracaso. Por ello, en el mes de diciembre cuando misteriosamente una polilla entr贸 revoloteando en mi habitaci贸n y se pos贸 en el libro de El principito, sent铆 que era tiempo de la revancha: Hab铆a sido una se帽al del destino. Dicen que todo tiene su tiempo y este libro es la clara demostraci贸n de esa afirmaci贸n porque tuvieron que pasar dieciocho a帽os y una polilla para reencontrarme con uno de los karmas de mi infancia. M谩s sin embargo, lo que no esperaba era que en esta ocasi贸n, otra experiencia negativa me estuviera esperando entre las p谩ginas de El principito.

Empezando por el argumento, este libro nos cuenta la historia de un aviador quien afirma haber conocido al principito luego de sufrir un accidente a茅reo en el desierto del Sahara. All铆, el principito le cuenta la historia de su viaje por muchos planetas, y luego cuando llega el momento dado, el principito regresa a su planeta de origen para cuidar a su mejor amiga que es una rosa... y esa es toda la historia, no hay m谩s. Los cuentos de fantas铆a muchas veces son as铆 como El principito: Sin l贸gica, sin reglas y sin profundidad. No obstante, una de las caracter铆sticas m谩s destacadas de ese tipo de libros es la magia que est谩 oculta en sus palabras. Desafortunadamente, esa magia nunca la sent铆 en este libro. Ahora, pensar谩n que ya me convert铆 en adulto y que por ello no puedo entender el significado del libro, pero no, eso no es as铆. Si no estuviera conectado con mi ni帽o interior no ser铆a capaz de escribir ni un p谩rrafo al hacer rese帽as. Mi mente adulta est谩 cargada de compromisos, apariencias, problemas, l贸gica, razonamiento, etc., pero ese ni帽o interior es quien tiene la chispa de la creatividad, de la imaginaci贸n, de relacionar dos temas sin sentido como por ejemplo una cuchara y el planeta j煤piter. Es el alma que me da la energ铆a y la curiosidad, y gracias a 茅l me siento vivo. Por ello, ese peque帽o Jes煤s Steven que llevo adentro, es el que me ha indicado que este libro no tiene magia por ninguna parte. Asimismo, es un texto que est谩 atiborrado de di谩logos absurdos y de mensajes err贸neamente expresados que buscan hacernos reflexionar forzosamente. La prosa tiene errores gramaticales, frases mal construidas y todo el libro est谩 compuesto de un ca贸tico desorden. S茅 que hay millones de seguidores de esta obra y que para muchos este es su libro favorito, pero para m铆, sinceramente, lo mejor que tiene esta obra son sus ilustraciones. Esto no es un libro, es un boceto. Estoy seguro que Antoine de Saint-Exup茅ry fue mil veces mejor aviador que escritor.

Eso s铆, aclaro que no estoy en contra de las historias donde un ni帽o aparece m谩gicamente para dar mensajes y ense帽anzas. No lo estoy, porque uno de mis libros favoritos tiene un 90% de similitud con El principito: Ese libro se llama Ami, el ni帽o de las estrellas. De hecho, conoc铆 aquel libro primero que El principito, y aunque reconozco que es una copia del popular libro de Saint-Exup茅ry, siento que aquella obra de Enrique Barrios ofrece una mejor ense帽anza. Esa ense帽anza se llama amor. Lo que me parece injusto es que Ami, el ni帽o de las estrellas, sea criticado fuertemente por el intento del autor de influenciar a los ni帽os en la religi贸n 鈥攁firmaci贸n que no comparto鈥�, pero, de El principito no se menciona nada de ello. Si los libros de autoayuda, los textos religiosos y los libros con alg煤n fin pol铆tico son cuestionados por la manipulaci贸n del autor, entonces El principito tambi茅n deber铆a ser juzgado del mismo modo porque todo el texto est谩 plagado de ese tipo de ideas. La domesticaci贸n; su intento de hacer sentir mal a las personas que no les gusta este libro; la idolatr铆a representada en la forma como el aviador ve铆a al principito; el uso del fracaso como medio para identificarnos con el aviador; pero sobretodo, el desagrado u odio que sent铆a Saint-Exup茅ry hacia la vida adulta, son solo peque帽as muestras de su intento por influenciar a los lectores para que no se adapten a una sociedad. A Saint-Exup茅ry no le interesaba que los lectores lucharan por sus sue帽os, su verdadera intenci贸n es que las personas estuvieran en contra de la sociedad porque la odiaba, es muy notable. Este libro solo es un mensaje de odio disfrazado de inocencia, amor, amistad, ternura y belleza. Solo es un libro m谩s que busca alterar la forma como el lector piensa. 驴Por qu茅 tantos lo aclaman y no se dan cuenta de algo tan obvio? No lo entiendo.

Tampoco sent铆 simpat铆a por los personajes. El principito solo me pareci贸 un ni帽o ingenuo y pregunt贸n que no entiende nada de la vida, pero que s铆 se atreve a cuestionar y juzgar el comportamiento de los hombres, sin conocerlos. Esa situaci贸n se asemejar铆a por ejemplo, si viaj谩ramos a un pa铆s con una cultura muy diferente a la nuestra, y al llegar empez谩ramos a juzgar y criticar a los habitantes del lugar por sus comportamientos, creencias y vestimenta: Ser铆a il贸gico juzgarlos. S铆, podr铆amos opinar, pero solo conociendo las razones que han llevado a esos seres a vivir la vida que poseen. El principito puede venir de Mercurio, de Plut贸n o de la constelaci贸n de Andr贸meda, pero 茅l, no es nadie para venir a criticar a seres que no conoce. Viv铆a con una rosa y se hart贸 de ella, no es una sorpresa que al llegar a otros mundos se comportara de la misma manera. Sin embargo, podr铆a decirse que al fin y al cabo el principito es un ni帽o y que es normal su imprudencia y tendencia a equivocarse; pero, el que no tiene excusa es el aviador: 脡l es el culpable de todo. El aviador encontr贸 un ni帽o en un desierto y solo porque 茅l ten铆a imaginaci贸n, result贸 idolatr谩ndolo como un dios: Il贸gico, completamente il贸gico. Todo lo que dijo el principito al aviador le pareci贸 espectacular, m谩gico y sabio; tanto as铆, que para el aviador se convirti贸 en una necesidad estar cerca de 茅l. Yo, creer铆a, que perderse en un desierto y estar en riesgo de muerte, puede alterar nuestra mente por lo que esa ser铆a la explicaci贸n al comportamiento inusual del aviador. Para m铆, el aviador perdi贸 la cordura. El principito solo era un ni帽o com煤n y corriente, sin ninguna habilidad extraordinaria. Quiz谩s nunca existi贸, quiz谩s solo fue producto de la imaginaci贸n del aviador. Si eso fuera as铆, eso lo explicar铆a todo.

Vi茅ndolo de este modo, y teorizando un poco, podr铆a decirse que si se toma El principito como la historia de un demente, entonces este libro s铆 ser铆a una genialidad. La mala redacci贸n, las frases sin sentido y la historia absurda, solo as铆 tendr铆an sentido. 驴Qu茅 fue lo que realmente Saint-Exup茅ry escribi贸? 驴Hemos estado malinterpretando todo este tiempo esta historia? Para averiguarlo tendr铆amos que regresar en el tiempo y pregunt谩rselo en persona a Saint-Exup茅ry, no hay otra forma; por lo tanto, que cada quien crea lo que desee pensar porque no podemos resolver esas preguntas. Sin embargo, esta extra帽a posibilidad podr铆a convertir este libro en una gran iron铆a. 驴Por qu茅? Porque durante varias generaciones este es uno de nuestros primeros libros de la infancia. 驴Hemos le铆do un libro para ni帽os, o la oscura historia de un demente? No quiero persuadir a nadie con esta idea; de hecho, ni siquiera yo creo en ello, pero es una posibilidad que se me ocurri贸 en el mism铆simo instante en que escrib铆 el p谩rrafo anterior y me pareci贸 interesante compartirla con todos ustedes.

En resumen, El principito es un libro que est谩 orientado para las personas que no est谩n acostumbradas a leer, pero que buscan encontrar en un texto el camino que sienten que han perdido. Si ya se tiene experiencia leyendo, o no estamos desesperados por la infelicidad, es mejor no leer este libro. Puede ser un cl谩sico, pero personalmente siento que no deber铆a serlo por la pobre calidad de la que est谩 compuesto. Asimismo, si leyeron este libro hace mucho tiempo y tienen una imagen positiva del principito, puede que cuando lo relean cambie la perspectiva y sensaciones que tuvieron en su primera lectura; a menos, que este libro los haya ayudado en sus momentos dif铆ciles. De ser as铆, a pesar de releerlo mil veces, El principito siempre ser谩 un gran amigo para ustedes.

Ahora, bas谩ndome en mis dos lecturas y las experiencias desastrosas que he vivenciado, siento que no hay raz贸n para volver a leer este libro nunca m谩s. Cuando reci茅n finalic茅 mi segunda lectura, planeaba puntuarlo con dos estrellas, pero ahora que lo pienso eso no es justo. Hay libros que he calificado con esa puntuaci贸n pero por lo menos tienen virtudes para destacar. No puedo puntuar con dos estrellas un libro donde lo m谩s destacado son sus ilustraciones: Ser铆a un desatino hacerlo. Por lo tanto, mi calificaci贸n es de 0 estrellas.
Profile Image for 亘孬賷賳丞 丕賱毓賷爻賶.
Author听27 books28.8k followers
February 21, 2013

賰鬲丕亘 賱匕賷匕貙 卮賴賷貙 毓匕亘貙 賱丕賲爻賳賷 賮賷 兀毓賲賯 卮睾丕賮賷貙 賮賷 胤賮賵賱鬲賷. 賮鬲賳賳賷 賵毓卮賯鬲賴貙 賷賳丿乇購 兀賳 兀賯亘賾賱 賰鬲亘賷 - 廿匕 賷噩亘 丕賱鬲丨賮馗 賯賱賷賱丕 賲毓 賴匕賴 丕賱賰丕卅賳丕鬲 - 賵賱賰賳賳賷 賯亘賱鬲購 賴匕丕 丕賱兀賲賷乇 丕賱氐睾賷乇貙 賵乇丿鬲賴 賵賳噩賲鬲賴 賵亘乇丕賰賷賳賴 丕賱禺丕賲丿丞貙 賯亘賱鬲賴 賮賷 賯賱亘賴.

毓賵丿賵丕 兀胤賮丕賱丕賸 賴賳丕 :)
Profile Image for Kai Spellmeier.
Author听7 books14.7k followers
March 8, 2018
鈥淚t is only with the heart that one can see rightly; what is essential is invisible to the eye.鈥�

I remember, when I was little, I had this round CD case and it contained an audiobook. Now as a child I loved audiobooks, or someone reading stories to me. Still do today, actually. Anyway, the audiobook was titled The Little Prince, and I listened to it quite often. That, however, was at least 10 years ago, possibly more. So I decided that it was time for a reread. (I'm sorry to say that I cannot find the CD anywhere. Maybe my mom gave it away.)

Rereading this brought up nostalgia and melancholia. This is a very cute, very sad book, and I don't like the ending very much. I don't understand why the Prince couldn't just fly back to his planet.

This is a beautiful tale of childhood, love and friendship. One that I wouldn't have wanted to miss.

Profile Image for Val 鈿擄笍 Shameless Handmaiden 鈿擄笍.
2,031 reviews35.2k followers
February 23, 2022
2 Stars

I know this is a much loved children's classic that has been published in pretty much every language there is. As such, I'm not pretentious enough to think my thoughts on it matter, so I'll keep this short.

I have challenged myself to read one classic a month this year, and so far, I am failing miserably. MISERABLY, you guys. It's July (almost August, but I'm throwing myself a bone so I feel like less of a loser) and I have only read two. This one and Peter Pan (of which I also completely missed the plot). And yes, I chose both of them because they are short. And geared for children. So I figured they would be easy to read.

Wrong.

I finished Alice in Wonderland on December 28th of 2017 (which I ALSO didn't love), after reading it over the course of almost a full month. If only I had really let my loser truly shine and work for me for once and waited three more days to finish it. Then I would at least be three for seven.

But I digress.

I'm starting to think children's classics might not be for me. At least not these whimsical, nonsensical, fable/allegory-style classics for which I am obviously too uncouth and unintelligent. Or whatever the case may be. Regardless, I am just finding them to be very boring and I just can't get into them.

I'm gonna try Dorian Gray next though. NOT a children's classic. So hopefully I have more luck.

Fingers crossed.
Profile Image for Orsodimondo.
2,389 reviews2,346 followers
December 25, 2022
L鈥橧MMAGINAZIONE AL POTERE

Ma i grandi non capiranno mai che questo abbia tanta importanza.

description
Illustrazione originale di Antoine de Saint-Exup茅ry.
Profile Image for Nilufer Ozmekik.
2,946 reviews57.5k followers
December 5, 2021
This is my seventh time to reread and enjoy the little prince鈥檚 thought provoking, sad, poetic, nostalgic, powerful, emotional journey to the world!

Nearly 80 years later from its first release it still addresses to your heart, giving its important social criticism messages and also it gives you hope about friendship, childhood, life. That鈥檚 why after all these years the book is still cherished by both adults and young generations.

It was also great reflection of France鈥檚 fall at the end of World War II. It鈥檚 time to build a new country that is rising from its ashes.

Anytime I join this adventure, it makes you cry and smile at the same time which makes this book unique, timeless, lyrical, extraordinary.

Here are my favorite quotes:

鈥淎nd now here is my secret, a very simple secret: It is only with the heart that one can see rightly; what is essential is invisible to the eye.鈥�

鈥淭he most beautiful things in the world cannot be seen or touched, they are felt with the heart.鈥�

鈥淕rown-ups never understand anything by themselves, and it is tiresome for children to be always and forever explaining things to them鈥�

鈥淲here are the people?鈥� resumed the little prince at last. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a little lonely in the desert鈥︹€� 鈥淚t is lonely when you鈥檙e among people, too,鈥� said the snake.鈥�

鈥淚f you love a flower that lives on a star, it is sweet to look at the sky at night. All the stars are a-bloom with flowers...鈥�
Profile Image for Manny.
Author听42 books15.8k followers
August 12, 2018
[Original review, Jul 24 2018]

This month, three plotlines in my life collided. I know Swedish and Norwegian well, and I'd thought vaguely from time to time that I'd like to learn Icelandic too; I've always been a great admirer of Tolkien, and I knew he had been interested in Icelandic; and I have a couple of Icelandic friends. But none of this had ever come to anything. Last week, however, Jupiter aligned with Mars and I entered the Age of Aquarius. I'd just finished reading Tolkien: Maker of Middle-Earth , which has many striking passages in Icelandic, Old Norse and Old English, and our friend K happened to be on Iceland. Fired with enthusiasm by Tolkien's love of these obscure but wonderfully poetic languages, I asked K if she could possibly get me one or two Icelandic children's books. I just don't know how to thank her: she turned up with not one or two but half a dozen books, including my favorite, Le petit prince. I spent the next few days carrying it with me everywhere, snatching all opportunities to try to make sense out of it.

For people who don't know anything about Icelandic, it has the same ancestor as Swedish, Danish and Norwegian. A thousand years ago they were the same language. But the mainland languages have evolved at a normal rate, while Icelandic, on its faraway island, has changed relatively little; so if you speak Swedish or Norwegian, it's like trying to read a language which for an English-speaker would be somewhere between Chaucer and Beowulf. You recognise a few of the words at once, others are more or less mangled, and still others are completely unfamiliar. The first impression is that it makes no sense at all. But I know Le petit prince, and I started trying to guess what word was what, just reading without looking anything up.

It was amazing to see how well this worked. For example, let me show you the following sentence:
脼ar sem 茅驳 haf冒i adrei teikn补冒 kind dr贸 茅驳 upp fyrir hann 补冒ra af 镁eim tveimur myndum sem 茅驳 var f忙r 补冒 gera: myndina af kyrkisl枚ngunni utanver冒i.
The first time I saw this, there were only a couple of words I felt at all sure about. Upp and var must be the same words as in Swedish ("up" and "was"). I soon figured out that 茅驳 was "I" (it is the same word in some Norwegian dialects), 补冒 was att ("that"), and hann was han ("he/him"). The words mynd and kind weren't like anything I recognised, but they were common, and having already come across them I realised they must be "drawing" and "sheep". As I read the book for the second time, the other words gradually fell into place too, and after a while I could read it as sort-of-Swedish:
D氓 som jag hadde aldrig tecknad f氓r drog jag upp f枚r honom den-andra av dem tv氓 teckningarna som jag var f枚r att g枚ra: teckningen av pytonormen utifr氓n.
which I might render into sort-of-English as:
Then as I had never drawn sheep pulled I up for him the-second of the two drawings which I was able-to make: the-drawing of the-python from-outside.
I recalled that there was a sentence something like this near the beginning of the story: it all made sense.

How does it work? I've been reading deep learning theory, and it's tempting to conceptualise it in terms of strengthening of neural pathways. I see a word I don't know, and I think of some words it could be: 补冒ra to a Swedish-speaker first looks like 氓诲谤补, "vein", and you only later think of andra, "second". This word occurs quite often. "Vein" never makes any sense, but "second" often makes good sense. So the pathway for 氓诲谤补 never gets strengthened but the one for andra does, and after a while my eyes just start seeing it as andra. The same thing happened with numerous other words. As I'm sure many language geeks will attest, it is such a weird and interesting feeling to find the sense emerging from words which initially looked like gibberish! I'm sorry if I've gone into too much detail here, but I wanted to explain what I mean when I say it's like doing drugs. You actually feel the text changing your state of consciousness.

Well, I'm hooked. Though so far, I've just barely started: the grammar is still a mystery to me. All the same, on my latest read-through I notice that the endings of nouns and verbs, which are first looked quite random, now seem to be displaying some recurrent patterns...
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[Update, Aug 6 2018]

I have been making efforts to understand in more quantitative terms what I've been doing here. First, I thought it would be a good exercise to try copying out the text of Litli prinsinn: this would force me to look carefully at every letter, and also give me a machine-readable version that I could analyse. I'm now about three-quarters of the way through (he has just said goodbye to the fox). I tried running my incomplete corpus, which contains about ten thousand words, through a script that Not and I developed last year.

The script is simple but quite useful. It counts frequencies for all the words in the corpus, then builds a hyperlinked concordance which shows me up to ten examples for each word. Every word is clickable, so I can take a word I'm unsure of in a sentence and see examples of that word in other contexts. There is a master index which lists all the words in descending frequency order. Here are the first 50 lines. The 'Freq' column gives the number of times the word occurs, and the 'Cumul' column gives the cumulative frequency:

LPTable1
LPTable2

All of these 50 words (to be exact, some of them are punctuation marks) are now very familiar to me, and as you can see they make up more than 50% of the text. I tried walking down the list to see when I stopped feeling confident. I can go as far as words with four or five occurrences, and I think I know what nearly all of them mean; that brings me up to about 400 words, and 75% of the total. When I look at words occurring two or three times, I start to feel uncertain, but I still think I know the majority of them. That gets me to 900 words and 86%. The 1600 words which only occur once are of course the hardest; but even here I feel I can guess a lot, perhaps a third to a half of them.

Copying out the text has sharpened my understanding of the grammar a good deal, and now I recognise quite a few endings. Though I'm still pretty hazy about the nouns. With multiple genders, multiple cases and marking for definiteness, there are many combinations, and I only know the most common ones.

It's surprising that one can extract so much information from a tiny sample of just ten thousand words. I'll see if I have the patience to finish this and then do 脝vint媒ri L铆su 铆 Undralandi as well...
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[Update, Aug 8 2018]

I have finished copying out the text of Litli prins; the file now contains about 14,200 words and about 3,050 unique words. I made a small improvement to our script, so that it now creates an alphabetical index as well. This is very useful for finding copying errors: if I see two words close together which are almost the same, that often means that one of them is an error. Tidying up my copied text is not as tedious as I thought it would be. It's forcing me to look very carefully at everything and consolidate my extremely sketchy vocabulary.

I am sure there are still many errors left, but after this initial cleaning up pass I can look at my alphabetical index and get further on trying to understand the grammar. Here's a section showing forms of the word stjarna, "star", which occurs often in Litli prins.

LPTable3

Some of these are compound nouns: for example, 蝉迟箩枚谤苍耻蹿谤忙冒颈苍驳耻谤, literally "star-ologist" is "astronomer", and 蝉迟箩补谤苍蹿谤忙冒颈镁颈苍驳颈, "star-ology-thing" is "astronomical congress". But what are all the others, most of which look like inflected forms? I can click on any of them and get a hyperlinked page of examples. For example, let's look at the page for 蝉迟箩枚谤苍耻, which occurs 15 times:

LPTable4

I see that occurrences of 蝉迟箩枚谤苍耻 usually come after a preposition. For example, we have Hann hefir aldrei horft 谩 蝉迟箩枚谤苍耻, "He has never looked at 蝉迟箩枚谤苍耻", or En 镁煤 ert hreinn og 镁煤 kemur fr谩 蝉迟箩枚谤苍耻, "But you are pure and you come from 蝉迟箩枚谤苍耻". Most of the others are similar. Hm, looks like this is a dative singular? My suspicions are reinforced by the fact that Swedish used to have a dative; it disappeared long ago, but still survives in a couple of fixed expressions like till salu, "for sale", which has this -u ending.

Still a great deal more grammar to figure out! There are some improvements to the script that I hope to add soon, and which might help...
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[Update, Aug 12 2018]

I have added another little improvement to our script. It now creates a hyperlinked version of the original text, with the words colour-marked to show how frequently they occurred in the text you've read so far. The initial version uses four colours. Words are in black if they occur more than five times, blue if they occur four or five times, green if they occur two or three times, and red if they occur once. Here's an example, the start of the visit to the Drunkard:

LPTable5

The colours let you see at a glance approximately how well I now understand the text. Look at the first paragraph:
脕 镁ri冒ja hnettinum bj贸 drykkjum补冒ur. Heims贸knin 镁ang补冒 var 尘箩枚驳 stutt, en h煤n fyllti litla prinsinn miklu 镁耻苍驳濒测苍诲颈.

(At the-third planet lived drunkard. The-visit there was very ?short, but it filled the-little prince much ?depression)
Black words like hnettinum ("planet", I think in the dative) and 尘箩枚驳 ("very") are quite familiar, and I am reasonably confident that I've guessed the green and blue ones correctly. Only two words, stutt ("short"?) and 镁耻苍驳濒测苍诲颈 ("depression"?) are in red, and these are indeed the ones I feel least certain about. I'm pretty much guessing stutt from context. I'm more confident about 镁耻苍驳濒测苍诲颈, since I know from other examples that 镁耻苍驳, cognate to Swedish tung, is "heavy", lyndi is probably something related to Swedish lynne, "spirit", and there is a Swedish word tungsint, "heavy-spirited/depressed".

This was an easier passage than average, and usually there is more red. But it feels motivating to think that, as I copy out more text and process it through the script, the red tide should start to recede...

[To 脝vint媒ri L铆su 铆 Undralandi ]
Profile Image for Paul Bryant.
2,368 reviews12k followers
April 28, 2011
In a grimy underground locked public toilet The Little Prince wakes slowly, he鈥檚 been out cold for hours. He鈥檚 bleeding from a gash on his upper arm. He finds he is chained by leg irons to the wall. There is another person sharing his predicament. It鈥檚 a bear, also chained to the opposite wall. In the center of the floor is the corpse of what appears to be donkey in a pool of blood. Near the corpse are a gun, a tape recorder and a saw.

鈥淕rownups are very strange,鈥� said the Little Prince to himself, sadly.
Profile Image for Alejandro.
1,246 reviews3,732 followers
September 11, 2015
Beautiful reading!


WHEN A ROSE IS NOT A ROSE

It is only with the heart that one can see rightly; what is essential is invisible to the eye.

I plan to read The Little Prince since many time ago, and I was aware that it was a quick reading, but still I hadn鈥檛 do it yet, until now.

I went to the cinema theaters and I watched the new animated film about it, and while I hadn鈥檛 read the book, I watched the film and I loved it. I was aware that it wasn鈥檛 an exact adaptation per se, and then I knew that it was about time to read the book.

It was a quick reading, it took me like a couple of hours. Wonderful book.
The Little Prince is a metaphorical and surrealist journey where a rose isn鈥檛 necessarily a rose, a fox isn鈥檛 always a fox, a small planet isn鈥檛 a small planet all the time...

All those things and more that you can find in the book, they will be whatever you need to be. You just need to recognize what will be the rose, what will be the fox, what will be the small planet...

And then, and only then you will be able to realice the power behind of this cute little book.


HIDDEN THINGS

What makes the desert beautiful,... ...,is that somewhere it hides a well...

Also, a hidden wonder about this book is that you not only need to realice what things in your own life to interchange with the ones in the Little Prince鈥檚 journey, but moreover, you need to 鈥渟ee鈥� with your heart and being able to find the 鈥渨ell鈥� in every 鈥渄esert鈥�.

Sometimes isn鈥檛 easy, and I guess that there will be moments when those deserts are truly dry, maybe there was a well some time ago, but it鈥檚 long gone. But only you, if you are careful and 鈥渙bservant鈥� with your heart, you will be able to make the difference.

At plain sight, your eyes can deceive you about what it鈥檚 in front of you, but if you learn to 鈥渨atch鈥� with your heart, rarely you will be fooled about it.

So, not matter if you are in a desert or a little planet (most likely an asteroid), be prepared to take flight and be ready with paper and a pencil, since who knows? Maybe the Little Prince will need you to draw something beyond the evident...








Profile Image for Vit Babenco.
1,702 reviews5,274 followers
March 19, 2023
Never before did I read The Little Prince 鈥� But it鈥檚 better late than never鈥�
Despite its outward simplicity the story possesses sagacity of parable鈥� It鈥檚 about loneliness and friendship鈥�
The little prince is a guest from the tiny planet鈥� Solitude is a very small planet鈥� In the desert he meets a pilot in trouble and they talk鈥�
鈥楽o what鈥檚 the point of thorns then?鈥�
The little prince never gave up a question once he鈥檇 asked it. I was angry with the bolt and snapped back without thinking:
鈥楾horns are pointless; they鈥檙e just a flower鈥檚 way of being spiteful!鈥�
鈥极丑!鈥�
But after a silence he said bitterly:
鈥業 don鈥檛 believe you. Flowers are weak and simple. They fend for themselves as best they can. They think they鈥檙e terrifying with their thorns.鈥�

On his way to Earth the little prince encounters several colourful personas 鈥� all of them are selfish, smug and indifferent. And only on Earth the wise fox teaches him the art of acquiring friends鈥�
鈥楶lease,鈥� he said. 鈥楾ame me!鈥�
鈥業鈥檇 like to,鈥� replied the little prince. 鈥楤ut I haven鈥檛 got a lot of time. I want to make friends and learn about things.鈥�
鈥榊ou only know about things you tame,鈥� said the fox. 鈥楶eople haven鈥檛 got time to know about things any more. They buy things ready-made in the shops. But as there aren鈥檛 any shops that sell friendship, they don鈥檛 have friends anymore. If you want a friend, tame me!鈥�

Even the only friend can save you from loneliness.
There is a rose unlike any other.
Profile Image for Nandakishore Mridula.
1,308 reviews2,601 followers
February 7, 2018
I have read only three books which I felt were magical: , and this one. However, what separates this from the other two is that this is a book for all ages.

There was a magazine called "Imprint" (now defunct) during my childhood, in India. It used to publish literary articles and stories. My father got official copies and he brought them home regularly. One issue contained this story, and he gave it to me for reading. I was maybe 10-12 at that time.

It left an indelible impression on my mind: I was sad for the little prince and his proud rose, and constantly worried whether the goat would eat it. I chuckled at the silly grownups on the various planets, following their inane pursuits. I was sad when the fox and the prince had to separate, after he had tamed it. And I broke down and cried at the end.

I read this book again after a long time... and suddenly realised that I had become one of those adults on the asteroids. I was still sad after reading it-but now the sorrow had a deeper meaning. It was the death of childhood that I was reading about.

This book is an absolute treasure.

Postscript

July 22, 2015 - I gave this book to my son a couple of days back. Hopefully he'll read it - he has yet to fully transform into a silly grown-up.
Profile Image for MischaS_.
783 reviews1,449 followers
March 17, 2020
EDIT (17/03/2020):
鈥淚t is such a mysterious place, the land of tears.鈥�

This, this is the right time to revisit your favourite books! It just feels like meeting an old-time friend.
Just what we all need at the moment! It really made me feel so happy to re-read this book again. I have limited time, and I try to focus on new books. And since we are asked to remain at home as much as possible, I thought this would be a great moment to re-read this book. The Little Prince will always remain my favourite!

鈥淚t is much more difficult to judge oneself than to judge others.鈥�



EDIT (08/06/2018):
"You understand... it is too far. I cannot carry this body with me. It is too heavy."

Whenever I read the Little Prince, I read it in the voice of my grandmother who used to read it to me when I was little.
And now, it became our final goodbye.

"And at night you will look up at the stars. Where I live everything is so small
that I cannot show you where my star is to be found. It is better, like that. My
star will just be one of the stars, for you. And so you will love to watch all the
stars in the heavens... they will all be your friends. And, besides, I am going to
make you a present..."

-------------

V t茅hle knize je n臎co 煤啪asn茅ho, v啪dycky m臎 uchop铆 za srdce a ten konec m谩m sto chut铆 o艡vat. A p艡itom je to tak jednoduch谩 kniha, ale je v n铆 takov茅 pravdy!
Jako mal谩 jsem m臎la CD, kde p艡铆b臎h vypr谩v铆 Ji艡ina Bohdalov谩, co j谩 jsem se toho naposlouchala. A nakonci, jak je "v媒zva", 啪e kdy啪 se mal媒 princ objev铆, tak j铆 m谩me napsat. Tak kolik j谩 jsem t臎ch dopis暖 napsala, kdy啪 jsem si hr谩la, m谩m pocit, 啪e by se doma je拧t臎 daly naj铆t.

Jedna z nejlep拧铆ch knih. Neuv臎艡iteln臎 smutn谩 a o to v铆c kr谩sn谩.

"Kniha je jako zrcadlo. Hled铆-li do n铆 hlup谩k, sotva m暖啪e o膷ek谩vat, 啪e uvid铆 n臎co geni谩ln铆ho." J. K. Rowling
Profile Image for Fabian.
995 reviews2,040 followers
July 16, 2019
For a kid's story, this one has rather heavy-handed intentions embedded into quite a sophisticated system of symbols that exists to produce a strong & emotional effect. Like Voltaire in "Micromegas", Antoine de Saint-Exupery plays with sizes & scales, meddles with the allegorical and even plays with time. He knew, like an astute psychoanalyst, precisely which images to use to convey the mere representation of Mortality. Le Petit Prince is the Everyman who has a deep passion somewhere inside of him and only with childlike wonder and awe (he asks questions on top of questions: no matter the degree of absurdity) is he able to show us glimpses of it. Externalizing feelings like only a child can. I find the golden-tressed titular child a very peculiar emblem in the middle of the Saharan desert... an eerie, living monolith (almost an oxymoron when one comes to think of it.) So, kids, let me ask you this one: Are we just placed on this planet so as to remain forever... ALONE?!
Profile Image for Pakinam Mahmoud.
997 reviews4,772 followers
November 27, 2024
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