This version of the book has been reviewed in (7899) by readers.   
Upload image
Add to my bookshelf as
Read it
Reading it
Want to Read
Won't Read
 
What are readers saying about Green Eggs and Ham?
Reviews of Green Eggs and Ham - Page 1 of 316
A Reader posted a review at 2008-10-23 08:45:10. (Language: English)
didn't like itit was okliked itloved itit was amazing
 Ever since I was a child and my dad took me to the book store in oxford street can't remember the name of the shop but it must be gone now anyway. I saw this book and he bought it for me. I love the mischevious little rat thing that bugs him to eat the green eggs and ham over and over again,the way that you read it with speed not really meaning to but it's fun! Many years later I took my daughter to the book store in camberwell and low and behold she picked the same book. She loves the way that in the end he likes green eggs and ham. It is now one of her favorites. I think the book has a moral without pushing. You never know if you like something until you've tried it! Go pick up a copy if you haven't got one already. A good book to read with the kids.
Was this review helpful?
Yes (0)
No (0)
Allison posted a review at 2012-03-20 02:26:59. (Language: English)
didn't like itit was okliked itloved itit was amazing
 who doesn't like Sam I Am...even if he is terribly annoying...
Was this review helpful?
Yes (0)
No (0)
kayla posted a review at 2012-01-18 09:20:16. (Language: English)
didn't like itit was okliked itloved itit was amazing
 best book ever in the history of the world!
Was this review helpful?
Yes (0)
No (0)
Savii posted a review at 2011-11-06 03:50:07. (Language: English)
didn't like itit was okliked itloved itit was amazing
 I thought it was wonderful! I loved the rhyming involved, and all the colorful illustrations.
Was this review helpful?
Yes (0)
No (0)
A Reader posted a review at 2008-08-01 08:04:08. (Language: English)
didn't like itit was okliked itloved itit was amazing
 As a friend and I have already declared, the best line in this book is, "I will not, will not, with a goat." But this story works on so many levels--nurturing a non-prejudicial worldview, building an appreciation for adventure, etc. It's even interesting artistically (well, so is every Seuss book, but stay with me.) Just tonight I heard Steve telling Patrick about the concept of perspective, on the page that shows the tunnel. And I haven't even mentioned the hysterical joy I experience when my boy shakes his fist and scowls just like the Mad Dude in the book ("Not in a box! Not with a fox!" etc.). This book is a must if you want smart, open-minded children. (And who doesn't? My Republican cousin even painted a scene from this book on his baby's nursery wall.)
Was this review helpful?
Yes (1)
No (0)
A Reader posted a review at 2009-07-24 09:44:59. (Language: English)
didn't like itit was okliked itloved itit was amazing
 A deeply inspiring book which reminds us to try exotic looking food before passing judgements. The prose contains a sincerety and simplicity that both children and adults can understand and relate to. The artistic value should not be overlooked, either.The contrast of colors used in Dr. Seuss' books is both abstract and eye catching. Put ten minutes aside in your day to ead this timeless masterpeice, and slowly feel your insides turn to mush as an ear to ear smile forms across your face.
Was this review helpful?
Yes (1)
No (0)
David posted a review at 2012-04-07 09:23:44. (Language: English)
didn't like itit was okliked itloved itit was amazing
 ENJOY ALL THE BOOKS AND MOVIES ALSO WANT GRANDDAUGHTERS TO READ, AND SEE.
Was this review helpful?
Yes (0)
No (0)
A Reader posted a review at 2009-08-28 10:13:05. (Language: English)
didn't like itit was okliked itloved itit was amazing
 this book is a very essential addition to any scholars library. This book explains the conflict of said "Sam" and the small fox like creature. Sam does not want to eat the green eggs and ham, the small fox like creature is trying to encourage Sam to eat the green eggs and ham. This is a very intriguing story and will keep you on the edge of your seat until the last page. One of the most chilling lines i have ever heard was from this book. -"Would you eat them with a fox?" ooo sends chills down my spine every time.
























































This was obviously a joke
Was this review helpful?
Yes (0)
No (0)
Donna posted a review at 2012-01-06 09:44:20. (Language: English)
didn't like itit was okliked itloved itit was amazing
 I do like green eggs and ham.
Was this review helpful?
Yes (0)
No (0)
A Reader posted a review at 2007-07-31 06:38:40. (Language: English)
didn't like itit was okliked itloved itit was amazing
 This book has a complicated plot about this persistent pain in the butt dude named Sam who is pushing this rotten eggs & ham on some old grouchy guy who we never find out what his name is. These eggs are so rotten that they have turned green. Come to think of it the green eggs & ham could mean many a things metaphorically speaking. The book has underlining hints at bestiality {Would you Could You In a box? Would you could you with a fox} Despite the train wreck & nautical disaster in the end all turns out well for that persistent bugger Sam & his rotten eggs as he finally get the poor wet sad soul to eat them & get addicted to them What a page turner, I could not put it down
Was this review helpful?
Yes (15)
No (13)
A Reader posted a review at 2007-09-01 04:13:20. (Language: English)
didn't like itit was okliked itloved itit was amazing
 Did you know there is a breed of chicken called Ameraucanas that actually lay green eggs? Food for thought:)

Green Eggs and Ham a la Sam-I-Am
Ingredients

1-2 tablespoons of butter or margarine
4 slices of ham
8 eggs
2 tablespoons of milk
1-2 drops of green food coloring
1/4 teaspoon of salt
1/4 teaspoon of pepper

What You'll Need
knife, medium-size mixing bowl, wire whisk or eggbeater, large frying pan, spatula, aluminum foil, serving plates

1. With an adult's help, melt a teaspoon of butter in a large frying pan over medium heat. Add sliced ham and brown until edges are slightly crisp. Remove the ham from the pan, cover with aluminum foil, and set aside.

2. In a medium-size mixing bowl, combine the eggs, milk, salt, and pepper. Beat with a whisk until frothy. Then add 1-2 drops of green food coloring until you reach the desired shade of green.

3. With an adults help, heat a tablespoon of butter or margarine in a large frying pan over medium heat until the butter begins to sizzle. Then add the egg mixture to the pan.

4. Stir the egg mixture with a spatula until the eggs are firm and not too runny.

5. Transfer the eggs to individual plates. Garnish with a sprig of parsley. Add the ham prepared earlier. Serve with toast or warm rolls.

Feeds 4 hungry green-egg lovers.
Was this review helpful?
Yes (30)
No (6)
A Reader posted a review at 2013-05-10 11:33:38. (Language: English)
didn't like itit was okliked itloved itit was amazing
 Timeless
Was this review helpful?
Yes (0)
No (0)
A Reader posted a review at 2009-01-25 01:45:22. (Language: English)
didn't like itit was okliked itloved itit was amazing
 I read this book to Brody the other night. His thoughts: (zzzz...) Maybe later. I do beleive that there are leesons that a young boy can learn from this book to prepare him for the dating world when he gets older, particularly the value of persistence and imagination. Substitute a member of the fairer gender as the object of Sam's repeated offerrings. Not easily dismayed by early rebuffs, Sam uses his imagination for further offerings of his ham and eggs. He does not give up, trying different places such as a house, tree, and boat, or including a mouse, fox, or goat (beastiality a recurring theme), and conditions such as in the dark or in the rain. Finally his persistence pays off, and sure enough, not only does the object of his affections like his ham and eggs, they can't get enough of it, and want his ham and eggs all the time and in every different way. Sound familiar? I'm sure the next chapter is something like "Sam gets tired of ham and egging it" Such lessons can never be given too early to a young boy.
Was this review helpful?
Yes (0)
No (0)
A Reader posted a review at 2012-08-17 10:14:49. (Language: English)
didn't like itit was okliked itloved itit was amazing
 This is my favorite Dr. Seuss book. I thought the green eggs and ham looked mighty tasty
Was this review helpful?
Yes (0)
No (0)
maria posted a review at 2011-10-25 05:03:06. (Language: English)
didn't like itit was okliked itloved itit was amazing
 Loved it!
Was this review helpful?
Yes (0)
No (0)
A Reader posted a review at 2011-06-19 12:26:57. (Language: English)
didn't like itit was okliked itloved itit was amazing
 If I had to make a list of books that were influential in my life, Green Eggs and Ham would have to be at the top of it. When I was three years old, I was convince that I could read because I could recite this whole book front start to finish while turning the pages at the right time. At least, that's how I remember it.
Was this review helpful?
Yes (0)
No (0)
A Reader posted a review at 2007-12-12 11:05:58. (Language: English)
didn't like itit was okliked itloved itit was amazing
 One of the most useful books I've ever found in getting children to try new things, especially food. My mother will attest to how well it worked on me. I don't understand why but my parents could convince me when I was little to try just about any food by saying "You don't want to be a Sam I am, now do you?" It worked, I ate all sorts of vegetables, such as brussel sprouts and asparagus, that many adults won't touch let alone children. It also probably helped that they had a one taste test a year rule. I just had to try something. If I didn't like it, then I didn't have to finish it or try it again until a year had passed or I wanted to.
But really, in a kids book, what more do you want than funny drawings, entertaining alliteration and the ability to convince a child to try something that they don't want to, especially if it's "green".
Was this review helpful?
Yes (15)
No (3)
Mrs Mary posted a review at 2008-08-10 05:03:40. (Language: English)
didn't like itit was okliked itloved itit was amazing
 This is one of my favourite Dr. Seuss books! I have read it countless of times to my students at Story Time when I worked as a Library Assistant. Dr. Seuss at his best! I recommend it to children of all ages! Myfavourite character is Sam who bend over backwards to try to get the main Character to eat Green Eggs and Ham. It teaches children and grown-up alike to try different foods as the old adage says, 'How do you know if you don't like it if you won't try it!' Theador Suess Gisel was an American Author born in 1904 in Massachusetts. It was his Mother that inspired him to write in rhymes. He studied in Oxford University and upon his death he had written over 44 children's books.
Was this review helpful?
Yes (0)
No (0)
A Reader posted a review at 2008-10-07 04:14:21. (Language: English)
didn't like itit was okliked itloved itit was amazing
 great book for rhyming, if not way too long in length. nevertheless, kids were surprisingly engaged in the reading (of course, their favorite part: the train). even children with PDD or autism are attracted to the rhymes. i have more than one who have responded positively (visually, auditorily, even verbally!) to my reading.

as i have some picky eaters in the room, i also tried to bring out the underlying message that we all should at least try and taste food that may not seem appealing at first. but of course, they're either too young to understand the concept or simply too insistent to yield.

to my surprise, the kids absolutely love it, even the ones w/autism.
Was this review helpful?
Yes (1)
No (0)
Dominique posted a review at 2012-03-30 10:34:40. (Language: English)
didn't like itit was okliked itloved itit was amazing
 Any book by Dr. Seuss is a great book!
Was this review helpful?
Yes (0)
No (0)
A Reader posted a review at 2011-12-27 05:04:32. (Language: English)
didn't like itit was okliked itloved itit was amazing
 I must admit that I do like, Green Eggs and Ham.
Was this review helpful?
Yes (0)
No (0)
A Reader posted a review at 2012-01-18 11:59:57. (Language: English)
didn't like itit was okliked itloved itit was amazing
 Pretentious drivel!
Was this review helpful?
Yes (0)
No (0)
A Reader posted a review at 2012-02-25 08:55:06. (Language: English)
didn't like itit was okliked itloved itit was amazing
 my younger brother's fave-read it about a hundred times
Was this review helpful?
Yes (0)
No (0)
A Reader posted a review at 2009-02-09 02:45:33. (Language: English)
didn't like itit was okliked itloved itit was amazing
 Sam and Mr "I don't want to eat green eggs and ham" battle their way through this book for young children aged 0-6. Sam uses an array of funny and amazing ideas to make green eggs appealing. Young children will recognise a problem they face everyday trying to decide to eat food they don't like the look of. Dr Suess cleverly uses the 1st 45 words a child starting school will have to learn. He creates an quest and the zippy cartoons keep the child fascinated on every page. He has created a book you can read to your 0-4 year old,have your 5 year old read to you and then a 8 to their younger siblings.Does the green eggs and ham get eaten? You'll have to read it to find out but the end is witty funny and very satisfying.
Was this review helpful?
Yes (0)
No (0)
A Reader posted a review at 2007-07-06 04:49:17. (Language: English)
didn't like itit was okliked itloved itit was amazing
 Sociocide: A Children’s Story

By David Jewison




It is true, through out the course of history, there has been no group, or race of people that have been persecuted, beaten and enslaved more than we Jews. There has been no single faith that has been under attack for so long and by so many as the faith known as Judaism; from 586 B.C., when the Babylonians destroyed our first holy temple, to 70 C.E., when the Romans abolished another of our great synagogues, up until the brutal reality of the holocaust, brought on by the beast like inhumanity of the Nazis. Yes, we have been enslaved a hundred times over in between, treated as second class citizens and then made the butt end of many a disgraceful jokes even after the horrors of potential genocide. Where will it end? Will it end? It’s hard to say. After the second world war, many of us were left breathless in the wake of the atrocities that occurred and it is very true that the Americans were the first to offer their help. However, it seems in retrospect that perhaps we were saved from the hungry mouth of the fox that was Germany, by the wolf in sheep’s clothing that was America. America, very much on the verge of the Cold War, knew that they needed more than just military help, but also a strong financial frame from which to launch into an arms race with the great bear of Russia. How was America- who indulged racist stereotyping- to do this? Why, just invite the Jews over to run the bank books (keep in mind the United States of America had no conscience about applying the mind of Albert Einstein to kick-start the arms race). Going to American may have seemed an appealing notion at the time, since many of us were leaving a country where we had just been, shoved into gas chambers and incinerators, forced to perform slave labour, and thrown onto operating tables where our bodies were butchered and vandalized, until we resembled anything from a candle stick to a member of the opposite sex. Too gruesome to even imagine I admit. “Coming To America,” as Neil Diamond suggested, seemed like a great idea, but what would the cost? In the great nation of Canada, multi-culturalism is welcomed, it holds a mosaic of: nations, cultures and religions within the walls of one great country. America’s melting pot is a little less inviting however. Would we have to sacrifice our heritage? Our faith? Our culture? The American melting pot had no concern for our plight, but only for their own. Theodore Geisel (also know as Dr. Seuss) may have been a hero to our community, or perhaps a provider of perverse and false propaganda; which is unclear, but in his short children’s book; Green Eggs and Ham, he, in great detail, articulated exactly what happened to the Jewish immigrants headed to America shortly after the end of the second world war. It is unclear whether Geisel supported the United States in this selfish act of depravation by his home country, or just pointed out to the people of his faith what some of us weren’t aware of, using a children’s story as his vehicle (as he did so many other issues he had written about). The cartoons and language in said book could have easily been a cover for the red white and blue propaganda machine, or a disguise in which to sneak past the censors of the aforementioned propaganda machine. Though his personal motivation remains unclear, it is still obvious what the story inside is about.
The book starts off with a small cartoon character prancing about atop a beast that is yellow in colour (an obvious reference to the country’s victory and dominance over the yellow skinned enemy of Japan), holding a sign that pronounces ‘I am Sam.’ There is no icon that represents Americana more than the patriotic ‘Uncle Sam.’ Here, in one cartoon figure, the American propaganda entices the Jewish community with two of it’s most important and popular figures; Samuel and Abraham. The first is very obvious, as Sam is a short form for Samuel, or Shmuel as it is spelt in Hebrew. Though the cartoon in Geisel’s book doesn’t match up to the popular version of ‘Uncle Sam,’ it’s as clear as the nine flames of the menorah that good old ‘Uncle Sam,’ is a character based off of the president who brought freedom to the slaves; Abraham Lincoln. Coincidently, this great leader (America’s first president that could honestly be called great as instead of owning slaves he delivered them into freedom), shares his name with the first of all Jews; Abraham. The phrase “I am,” is taken straight from the Torah, in a verse where God speaks to our people and says he is the “I am.” ‘Sam,’ journeys around the corner where an unnamed Jew sitting in annoyance to his outlandish display, only to come back with a sign that reads the reverse; ‘Sam I am,’ now travelling on a pink coloured bear. The colour pink is indicative of communism, and Geisel, in his political drawing always depicted Russia as a great bear. Sam sitting on top of this wilting bear is clearly an indication that America felt it was the world military leader, even over the ‘pink-os’ of communist Russia. This Judaist friendly figure, bearing the resemblance of two great Jewish leaders, will be America’s ally in winning over the Jews that survived the holocaust.
The unnamed Jew that Sam is in pursuit of, sits reading a paper that is illegible to the American eye. As this story is being told through the perception of an American, what is written on the paper is as unimportant as how it is written. This articulates what little interest America had in the Judaist culture, only the benefits it believed it would receive from the people of this great faith were of importance to the Yankees. What, you may ask, indicates that this character who Sam is in pursuit of is at all Jewish? It is as painful to sight as the avelut is to the heart, but this cartoon only encourages Jewish stereotypes. Perhaps to the North American eye it is harder to see, but we Jews are so used to the cartoonish features the world attributes to us that they jump right out onto our challar tray. The sleepy eyes, sour frown, olive coloured skin, the hook nose (or at least as hook as one can be when the character is meant to resemble a dog to some degree). The ears are curled and long, hanging all the way down to the chin, not unlike the payos that were worn by many Jews at the time, a tradition that the American culture laughed at until it was all but nonexistent. The large top hat was also very common around the time of the Jewish migration to America after the second world war, usually to cover the Yarmulke or kippah as some Jews refer to it. Once worn at all times, out of both respect and fear of our great king, the God of Abraham, now it is worn by most only during services since it has become a punch line amongst the prejudicial North American community.
Short of making the character (who remains unnamed through out the book, as many of those killed in the holocaust remained unnamed in their tombs) wear an arm band that identifies him as ‘Jewish,’ (as the Nazis had done), Geisel has done everything he could possible do to identify this poor soul as a representative of the Jewish community.
It is a known fact the those who practice Judaism do not eat ham because of our religious convictions. Americans however, have no such conviction and don’t understand why we would hold such a belief. It is also against our religion to eat any kosher dairy products in the same sitting that we eat any kosher meat; another conviction that is not understood by those who hold the Christian faith. Yet this American grager offers up an American plate to the unnamed victim of this book as if he were performing a Bentsch. “Do you like green eggs and ham?” Though the eggs may pass as milchig, ham is as far from fleishing as anything can get and the two must never be eaten together. Yet Sam still offers it this doubly treif meal. How does Sam spice up this sinful dish? Well, One thing the Jewish community is recognized for (as well as made the victim of numerous jokes over), is the fact the many in the Jewish community are extremely capable of handling money very well and making a tidy profit doing so. This is a skill, which we were forced to develop (not one learned as a result of personnel greed as our reputation foretells many). Many countries where we lived did not allow us to own land. In turn we would do the only thing we could do with our money since we weren’t allowed by law to own anything; we managed it. Eventually, people of other faiths came to those in our community to handle their money. Business was usually done on public benches as we had no offices, or buildings, (the French word bancho, which eventually becoming the English word bank, actually meant bench). America perceived this as our Achilles heel. Christian America offered us to take on their life style, tempting us with the one thing they believed we couldn’t resist; money. In America it is no secret that money is coloured green, as were the eggs and ham that were extended to the unnamed Jew that sat before Sam. The Jew was resilient though, recognizing that green is not only the colour of money, but also the colour of the sour fruit that hasn’t yet ripened. The Christian/Catholic monotheism didn’t fit in with the Judaist Halakhah, and so Adam, this time at least, did not take a bite from the poisonous apple.
Sam cannot, at first, convince the unnamed Jew to try his lifestyle, so he offers; “Would you like them here or there?” Shmoozing (strictly in the American cheapened interpretation of our word). Here he points with two elongated hands, to far areas of the page on which the scene is drawn. On one page, a red hand falls in front of a black and white back ground, making up the colours of the Nazis swastika; red, white and black. The other hand falls onto a white and blue back ground, forming the colours of the American flag; red white and blue, suggesting that if he doesn’t accept the American way he will fall back into the hands of inhumane fascists. Regardless of the situation (excluding of course survival), the unnamed Jew refuses to take on the Christian life style which Sam wishes to push onto him; “Would you like them in a house? Would you like them with a mouse?” Here again, Sam compares the life they had to the one they could have in America. In Germany, they were treated as prey by the Nazis. In America however, the were allowed to own land and would not be treated as second class citizens. Still holding to his virtues, the unnamed Jew declines.
Ever the salesman, Sam continues presenting the other options which the unnamed Jew could choose from; “Would you eat them in a box? Would you eat them with a fox?” The box he is referring to is of course coloured in the same fashion as the Nazi swastika, asking the Jew if he really wants to stay in that atmosphere. The other option is a pink fox. Pink again referring to Russia, the world’s communist leader and predator which denounced religion in any form (at least at the time), and banned it from within the walls of their nation. No doubt the parable of the fox and the fish, told in the Talmud, floated into the unnamed Jew’s mind. The atmosphere in Europe was the equal of the fisherman’s nets, chasing the fish up the river. A fox, who can be paralleled with America, comes up beside the fish and offers the fish to come up on land to live with him. The fish declines, recognizing the trickery of the fox and imploring that he must stay in the element that provides him with life if he is at all to live. The unnamed Jew’s inner strength was level and strong at the start, but now may resemble some matzah. He is like the fish; he has no positive option, but regardless, holds onto his faith. He sees that Sam is not a mashgiach, and therefore will not take his food.
Now Sam goes to the well, offering the American dream as though it were an act of tzedaka (and no doubt this entire scene occurred during Yom Kipper), which to the American seems irresistible. Wealth and a high standard of living in a country full of resources; “In a car?...In a tree!” In Europe it was known that not many people owned cars, in comparison to those who populated America. Propelled by an excess of factories equalled only by the vast natural resources (which the tree represents, though forestry was only one of many resources that made America the envy of the rest of the world, barring Canada). The unnamed Jew is clearly aware of these benefits, but values his religious integrity higher than his standard of living. Since positive reinforcement wasn’t working very well, Sam decides to go back to the negatives; “Could you, would you on a train...in the dark...in the rain.?” No doubt these three things would bring back frightening memories of the Holocaust, being carted off in trains, stuffed in like cattle, little if any light getting through the cramped box carts that brought them to the gas chambers. They’d line up, expecting water, but received death instead. Working outside constantly in the rain plagued climate of Germany. If this book were reality, the gentleman Sam was pursuing would no doubt be broken into tears by this moment. It is certain, after this speech, the Jewish mentsch, whose fortitude had been as strong, straight and level as the Magen of David as the book began, now is closer to resembling the characteristics of a latke. His faith however, holds him together. In return, he passes on the life that would bring him all the physical comforts and securities that this world could afford and instead chooses spiritual salvation.
Sam continues, illustrating that he is as much a grager as he is a human being, showing no thought or consideration for the beliefs of the unnamed Jew that America wishes to transform into a simple gear of the power-hungry machine that runs America; “Could you would you with a goat?” The goat was the second animal domesticated by man (the dog was the first). Domesticating was exactly what the Americans had in mind when recruiting the Jews into their Christian nation; “Would you, could you on a boat?” What was means of travel that all foreigners took when they were too tired, or poor for the nation that bore them? Well, these poor huddled masses would travel by boat of course. This is what Sam is suggesting to the unnamed Jew. Before long, the unnamed Jew is drowning in what resembles a soup, or stew full of all kinds of American symbols. This is clearly the American melting pot at work. Now that Sam has worn down this poor man, he surrounds him by other people, watching him, like adolescents encouraging the deviant behaviour of a fellow student, waiting to see if he will actually follow in Lucifer’s path. Sam has spun a web of deceit faster than a Hebrew child spins a dreidel at Hanukah, bringing a false light to the American menorah. The unnamed Jew, now only a shadow of his former self, beaten down and weakened by the Germans in their attempt to wipe him out, is now a victim of the American melting pot. His beliefs smashed by Christian America into kugel. This was no closer to a mikvah than the gas chambers of Nazi Germany. Finally, a defeated man concedes. Swimming in this American stew that was no more a tzimmes than the green ham was a fleishig. As he takes his first bite, Geisel has all the creatures of his illustration staring at him, as so many Americans stared at the Jews’ peculiar payos and yarmulkes when they stepped off of the boat and onto the indifferent soil of New York. As he eats, the questioning glares change to cheers of joy, all the characters Sam has recruited through out the book encouraging this new life, as none of them care of his Judaic culture.
The final page has the unnamed Jew standing next to Sam, his right arm over Sam’s shoulder, and his left arm holding the empty challar tray that once contained the ‘...green eggs and ham.’ It is elevated in the air, as though it were as worthy as the Bimah. The two stand in front of a red, white and blue background, celebrating this evil transformation. The right arm, a sign perhaps that the right-winged Jewish beliefs had room to hold America’s moral system, but not without closing their eyes to do so, as Geisel’s rendition has the unnamed Jew doing. The left arm, holding what had been the left-winged and loose moral life style of Christian America. It is also important to mention that Sam is astoundingly shorter than the unnamed Jew who he has now all but destroyed (maybe not in body, but surely in soul), implying that to be brought to the level of America, the Jewish community must bring themselves down in the process. The cover illustration makes a similar case, as it pictures the unnamed Jew slouching down and compromising his stature to be at level with the life style. This indicates that perhaps Geisel’s held the view that America was the one at wrong in this story.
If we explore this small book using the Jewish practice of gematria (that is to find hidden meaning behind words using their numeric value), we find even more coincidences. One such coincident is with the words ‘house,’ and ‘box.’ Though the house is represented as a prize to hold and the other is compared to the prisons of the concentration camps, both equal five. House: 8+6+3+1+5 = 23. When we add these numbers together, we get five. Box: 2+6+6 = 14. If you add these numbers together, they equal five as well. In the eyes of God, neither is truly a prize. The house is no more of value to the soul than the box is. America, the new ‘home,’ for the Jews, as Sam suggests, also comes out to five when all of it’s letters are added up to a single digit. The word ‘fox,’ contains three letters, all of which hold a value of six; six-six-six. Being as how the fox represented either Russia or Germany in the book, and the parable in the Talmud made America out to be the fox of it’s story, and the number of the fox is equal to the number which Christians consider to be representative of the beast, then clearly these three nations, which at the time all posed a threat to Judaism, were all comparable to the devil. There are other interesting coincidences in the book, with some other words, but it is complicated. These ones are the most obvious and easiest to understand.
The Jewish community has been victimized throughout their entire existence. As soon as God placed his people on this Earth, the devil placed hatred toward these people. The Babylonians, the Romans, the Germans and even the Americans. The American punishment isn’t as cruel physically as slavery, but it is still torture, though admittedly one of a different sort, a spiritual slavery that is perhaps more cruel. At least when the Romans and Germans did this, they did not hide their intent or try and compromise our beliefs (though destroying us wasn’t much better). Germany was all too forward about genocide. America wanted the same as the Germans, but theirs was a more polite genocide, liberals may even call it ethnocide, or sociocide (as though that were any better), but they had the whole world watching them, they had to look compassionate. Bringing the Jews to America and making them rich made the Americans look like heroes to the rest of the world, maybe even like a mentsch to the Jews who were not aware of the evils lurking in this sinful state. We were still being destroying, only instead of gas chambers it was a cultural melting pot that wasn’t any better for our souls than the German burning us alive in incinerators. Instead of taking our lives, America stole the Jewish soul, and did it in such a way that those stranded on this same island (such as the blacks and aboriginals), look upon us as the enemy. The rich Americans. Rich in Earthly things, but our souls trapped in poverty. Genocide of the soul. The chai has left the soul. The great Rabbi Benjamin Blech once wrote; “It is better to be an innocent nail than a murderous hammer.” It is a challenging statement, but sometimes all to applicable. There is no telling how many sages were killed by Germany, or how many were corrupted by the American melting pot. Fortunately, the United Nations recognized that those who practiced Judaism needed a home and created Israel for them. Though we still battle with many (battles which I will, for lack of time leave unmentioned), we do have a home. One day though, we will celebrate with our Lord, the God of Abraham in the heaven he has created for us and escape these worldly tortures.
Was this review helpful?
Yes (18)
No (37)
Reviews of Green Eggs and Ham - Page 1 of 316
Share your views!
 
Copyright© 2010 All Rights Reserved weread.com