The Giving Tree: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[Axe Crazy]]: The boy.
* [[Axe Crazy]]: The boy.
* [[Just Eat Gilligan]]: Why don't you just get a friend that doesn't want to kill you, Giving Tree? Why don't you cut down a tree who ''can't'' talk, or at least one that's not your friend, little boy? This is spoofed hilariously [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XYQavD9mSIc here].
* [[Just Eat Gilligan]]: Why don't you just get a friend that doesn't want to kill you, Giving Tree? Why don't you cut down a tree who ''can't'' talk, or at least one that's not your friend, little boy? This is spoofed hilariously [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XYQavD9mSIc here].
* [[Karma Houdini]] The brat..er [[Last Second Word Swap|kid]]
* [[Karma Houdini]] The brat..er [[Last-Second Word Swap|kid]]
* [[Kick the Dog]]: Every time the boy takes wood from the Giving Tree.
* [[Kick the Dog]]: Every time the boy takes wood from the Giving Tree.
* [[Plant Person]]
* [[Plant Person]]

Revision as of 13:49, 26 January 2014

Don't do it, Giving Tree!
"Once there was a tree... and she loved a little boy."

A selfless tree falls in love with a boy and sacrifices everything she has to make the boy happy.

One of Shel Silverstein's best known works from an anthology of stories from a book of the same name. It is widely believed to be a metaphor for human, and especially parent-child, relationships.

This story is absolutely made of Applicability and even young children at barely the required reading level can recognize this. In fact, if read without regards to the symbolism, the story is disturbingly laden with Fridge Logic and Fridge Horror. For this reason the examples are split into three sections.


If read as a metaphor this work provides examples of

If read without metaphor this work provides examples of:

Read either way this work is an example of: