The three bears by A. E. Kennedy
Imagine giving your kid a happy picture book about trespassing, but then the author winks and whispers, Actually, here's what really happened. That's exactly the mood of A. E. Kennedy's The Three Bears—a twisty, funny, and slightly spooky take that our parents never read to us.
The Story
We all know the basics: Girl enters unlocked house. Girl tries food, chair, bed. Bears come home. Family scream, girl bolts. But in Kennedy's version, every single detail gets interrogated. Why did Goldilocks wander into the forest alone? Did she know the bears? Who left the front door open anyway? The story then flips points of view like a flip-flop at the beach. One chapter is told by Mama Bear stressing over guest etiquette. Next, critter neighbors gossip from behind the berry bushes. Eventually, a confused Officer Raccoon shows up with a notepad. Each voice sheds new, often hilarious, light on the break-in. Before you know it, Goldilocks isn't the pest—she might be a misunderstood kid trying to escape her own terrible home life. And the bears? They're trying to keep up appearances but have their own secrets. The real tension is this: Is the girl a villain? Victim? None of above?
Why You Should Read It
Honestly, I picked this up thinking it would be a cute coffee table joke. Instead, I spent a whole evening glued to its 200 pages. Kennedy does something amazing: she takes something so familiar it had become boring, and turns whole concept upside down. It made me question punishment and storytelling itself. The characters feel alive because they talk like actual people—or bears. Mama Bear complains about messy hair and teenage impulses. Baby Bear is basically a toddler one second and sly whisperer the next. Plus, bits of psychology creep in: Why do we label the 'bad' person just because others talk loudest? While reading, I caught myself wondering about a friend I'd once cut off after one side of a story. You'll leave entertained but carrying a quiet "hmm."
Final Verdict
This book fits anyone who still adores fairy tales but needs them smarter. Fans of Neil Gaiman's dark retellings or the twisted morals in Roald Dahl's stories will smile from page one. It's especially good for those who wish mystery novels for kids had snark and style like their own adult True Detective obsession Parents, don't flip to the last page thinking it's bedtime fodder: the confusion before the truth nails will haunt your cereal-picking brains long after the reading light is out.
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Paul Williams
7 months agoThis was exactly the kind of deep dive I was searching for, the author’s unique perspective adds a fresh layer to the discussion. A refreshing and intellectually stimulating read.
Christopher Miller
4 months agoThe balance between academic rigor and readability is perfect.