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Shreveport Times | The Times

It's no fairy tale. Mother Goose Day is coming

By Annie Gilmer,

13 days ago
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May 1st has a fair number of familiar and unusual celebrations to choose from, but since this is a library column, written by a librarian, I thought it was only fitting to choose Mother Goose Day as my topic this week.

Mother Goose Day was founded in 1987 by Gloria T. Delamar, an author of several books including one featuring Mother Goose tales. Mother Goose fairytales and nursery rhymes teach lessons and entertain, were written by Charles Perrault, a French writer in the 17th century; he is credited as being the creator of the “fairytale” genre as we know it. In 1729, Robert Samber translated Perrault’s work, calling it “Histories, or, Tales of Past Times, Told by Mother Goose.”

But did Charles Perrault create Mother Goose, or did she really exist? As with many a legend, there are several theories. In Boston, Massachusetts you can visit the grave of Mary Goose in the Old Granary Burying Ground; though she died in 1690 lending some weight to the theory that she is Mother Goose, there is no evidence to suggest she is the origin of Mother Goose’s tales. Another theory suggests that Elizabeth Foster Goose, Isaac Goose’s second wife after Mary’s death, is actually Mother Goose. It is even said that Elizabeth’s son-in-law published her stories and rhymes in 1719; no copy of this supposed publication has ever been found, so it’s unlikely that this theory is accurate either.

Historians have suggested that the moniker “Mother Goose” may actually have its origins back in the 8th century when Bertrada II of Laon, mother of Charlemagne, who dedicated herself to caring for children and was known as “Goose-foot Bertha” due to a malformation of her foot. Whether this theory is accurate or not, by the mid-1600s in France women who entertained children with stories and rhymes were often called “mere l’oye” (Mother Goose).

Nursery rhymes and fairytales continue to delight children today. From Mother Goose, to the Brothers Grimm, to Hans Christian Andersen, to Disney’s adaptation, all ages continue to delight in these tales.

Central Complex, new address: 850 City Hall Drive, Bossier City 71111

Questions? Email us at: contactus@bossierlibrary.org

Website:https://www.bossierlibrary.org/

Facebook:www.facebook.com/bossierlibrary

New Library Hours:

  • Central/History Center
  • Monday – Thursday, 9:00am – 8:00pm
  • Friday, 9:00am – 6:00pm
  • Saturday, 9:00am – 5:00pm
  • Benton
  • Monday – Thursday, 9:00am – 7:00pm
  • Friday, 9:00am – 6:00pm
  • Saturday, 10:00am – 2:00pm
  • Haughton
  • Monday – Friday, 9:00am – 6:00pm
  • Saturday, 10:00am – 2:00pm
  • Aulds/East 80/Plain Dealing/Tooke
  • Monday – Friday, 9:00am – 6:00pm

Library Locations:

  • Aulds Branch 318.742.2337
  • Benton Branch 318.965.2751
  • Central Library 318.746.1693
  • East 80 Branch 318.949.2665
  • Haughton Branch 318.949.0196
  • History Center 318.746.7717
  • Plain Dealing Branch 318.326.4233
  • Tooke Branch 318.987.3915

New and Coming Soon:

  • Against the Darkness: Buffy, the Next Generation, Book 3 by Kendare Blake (YA Fiction; Book, eBook)
  • Did It Happen Here? Perspectives on Fascism and America edited by Daniel Steinmetz-Jenkins (Non-Fiction; Book)
  • La Hija de la Diosa de la Luna (Daughter of the Moon Goddess): Celestial Kingdom, Book 1 by Sue Lynn Tan; translated by Patricia Sebastian (Fiction; Book, Spanish Collection, eBook, eAudiobook)
  • How to Walk into a Room: The Art of Knowing When to Stay and When to Walk Away by Emily P. Freeman (Non-Fiction; Book)
  • A Killing on the Hill: A Thriller by Robert Dugoni (Fiction; Book)
  • My Life in Recipes: Food, Family, and Memories by Joan Nathan; photographs by Gabriela Herman (Non-Fiction; Book)
  • Shackled: A Tale of Wronged Kids, Rogue Judges, and a Town That Looked Away by Candy J. Cooper (YA Non-Fiction; Book)
  • Single White Vampire: An Argeneau Novel by Lynsay Sands (Fiction; Book, eBook, eAudiobook)
  • The Wives: A Memoir by Simone Gorrindo (Autobiography; Book)
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