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Children's Book Review: Warrior Cats
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<blockquote data-quote="Jimi" data-source="post: 75141183" data-attributes="member: 429096"><p>I try to research books before my daughter reads them as I have found so many do not teach the values we try to uphold. However, this book slipped through and she was enthralled with it. The downside was her behavior became really strange. She picked a star, gazed at it, and prayed to it. She wrote secret notes and hid them away with a dagger she carved from wood. When I traced the source of this we got rid of the book. She was angry and now years later still rants about how wonderful that book was and how unreasonable we are. This is not the kind of behavior I would have expected to result from reading a benign book. I am not the type to look for demons under every stone, but something about that book was definitely pulling my daughter into an unhealthy and mystical realm.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Jimi, post: 75141183, member: 429096"] I try to research books before my daughter reads them as I have found so many do not teach the values we try to uphold. However, this book slipped through and she was enthralled with it. The downside was her behavior became really strange. She picked a star, gazed at it, and prayed to it. She wrote secret notes and hid them away with a dagger she carved from wood. When I traced the source of this we got rid of the book. She was angry and now years later still rants about how wonderful that book was and how unreasonable we are. This is not the kind of behavior I would have expected to result from reading a benign book. I am not the type to look for demons under every stone, but something about that book was definitely pulling my daughter into an unhealthy and mystical realm. [/QUOTE]
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