
Once upon a time there was a Little House way out in the country. She was a pretty Little House and she was strong and well built." So begins Virginia Lee Burton's classic The Little House, winner of the prestigious Caldecott Medal in 1943. The rosy-pink Little House, on a hill surrounded by apple trees, watches the days go, by from the first apple blossoms in the spring through the winter snows. Always faintly aware of the city's distant lights, she starts to notice the city encroaching on her bucolic existence. First a road appears, which brings horseless carriages and then trucks and steamrollers. Before long, more roads, bigger homes, apartment buildings, stores, and garages surround the Little House. Her family moves out and she finds herself alone in the middle of the city, where the artificial lights are so bright that the Little House can no longer see the sun or the moon. She often dreams of "the field of daisies and the apple trees dancing in the moonlight." Children will be saddened to see the lonely, claustrophobic, dilapidated house, but when a woman recognizes her and whisks her back to the country where she belongs, they will rejoice. Young readers are more likely to be drawn in by the whimsical, detailed drawings and the happy ending than by anything Burton might have been implying about the troubling effects of urbanization.
1943年凱迪克金獎
1959年劉易斯-卡羅爾書架獎
入選美國全國教育協會推薦100本最佳童書
入選美國全國教育協會“教師們推薦的100本書”
入選日本全國學校圖書館協會第22屆“好繪本”
入選日本兒童文學者協會編《100種世界圖畫書精選》
入選日本兒童書研究會繪本研究部編《為了孩子的500冊圖畫書》
本書英文原文,是優美流暢的詩歌韻文;圖畫用不同顏色表達出不同的季節和時間變換,細節之處流露出大自然之美;小房子也被賦予了人的特征和情感。