Ratings69
Average rating4.2
The Rabbit in the stocking isn't as expensive as the other toys: he's covered in velveteen. On Christmas Day, the Boy enjoys his new toy but then quickly forgets and neglects him. Shunned and unsure, the Velveteen Rabbit questions his worth. Should he even be called a real toy? An answer comes from his friend, the Skin Horse: "Real isn't how you are made. . . .It's a thing that happens to you. When a child loves you for a long, long time, not just to play with, but REALLY loves you, then you become Real." The Velveteen Rabbit's journey through love and loneliness to become who he was really meant to be is a story that inspires us all on our own journey to Real.
The Velveteen Rabbit is a timeless tale of friendship, love, acceptance and honesty. When the world seems uncertain, Margery Williams's classic story reminds all of us what really matters.
The type in this edition has been reset to emphasize the poetry of the language and to bring out the depth of sentiment in the story. William Nicholson's 1922 illustrations, which have delighted generations of readers, are rendered in full-color just as they appeared in the original edition of The Velveteen Rabbit. Together words and pictures create a world so much like our own, and yet so delightfully magical.
Reviews with the most likes.
a little traumatising but I'll be fine
never thought I would say this but I would like to fight all the toys who bullied my boy Velveteen Rabbit like that. Oh hell I'd fight the real rabbits too for what they said about my boys hind legs.
They better stfu before I make them into a pair of gloves or something. Rabbit who bully don't deserve to live. Electric chair.
Loved it. I didn't read this as a child but it was referred to often in the Grady Hendrix book I am currently reading so I picked it up and read it. Glad I did!