Don and Joyce are invited to spend the summer with their grandparents at the farm. Each day presents exciting opportunities for them to experience outdoor farm life-so different from the city-especial
I love those bee stories. They were like if I was like learning to be kind and patient and truthful and honest, and I loved those stories. What I loved the most is where we can have a great day when we listen to our consciences.
Grandma had this one, and she must've reached for it often, as the illustrations still linger in my mind. I never was overly fond of the stories, though.
This is an extremely well done book teaching children morals and manners by telling them to "Bee" this and "Bee" that. This has bedtime stories written all over it.
This is a good old fashioned book full of fun stories that my children like to hear. Each story has a "bee" quality or moral, such as "bee" careful, and it keeps the children interested to know more.
Two children are spending the summer with their loving and caring grandparents and they learn some very important lessons while there!
We made some little fuzzy bees out of pipe cleaners, googly eyes, and painted craft antennae, and a paper beehive for the bees, and added them to the cells (hung on the wall) as we read the stories. It was cute and fun!
Character lessons told in stories by a grandmother to grandchildren. I remember my younger kids really enjoying it but I guess the next kids are cooler because they thought the stories pretty cheesy 🤣. And I had to agree. So maybe I’m cooler now than I used to be too 😎
This book is several decades old, but it's message and morals are timeless. Don and Joyce stay with their grandparents on their farm over the summer, and each night before bed, Grandma shares with them stories that teach morals in a realistic way.
This isn't a book that pampers children with wrist slapping consequences, more on the heart wrenching and mind imprinting kind. For example, in one of the bedtime stories, a boy lies to his father about shutting the gate, and this results in his toddler brother being kicked by a mule and hurt for months as he tries to recover the blow to his spine. The boy apologizes and admits his error, the moral is to "BEE HONEST" and the children seem grateful to learn from his error that will keep them from sour consequences of their own.
Perhaps it's too harsh - but it was refreshing to me, no Hollywood endings for these stories! And it's not so traumatic that the girls were appalled or sombered beyond the desire to read it to them, conversely, they asked me for MORE MORE MORE!!! at the conclusion of each chapter, and so we often read three or four at a sitting.
This edition also has frequent illustrations, keeping the children close and patient during readings, anxious to see what the story is behind each picture.
Highly recommend. We're on to it's sequel, "Danny and Debbie Learn from Another Hive of Bees."
I remember I always liked it, when I was younger. It's full of interesting, and often exciting stories that all have lessons to them without being preachy.