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- NATION, Page 57American NotesCALIFORNIALittle Red Riding Hootch
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- With a wolf that eats a grandmother and a little girl who
- gets into mortal trouble by talking with a stranger, the
- classic fairy tale Little Red Riding Hood reeks of violence and
- veiled sexual terrors. But when a version of the story by Trina
- Schart Hyman reached Culver City, Calif., last fall, school
- officials thought they sniffed something really troubling: an
- implied endorsement of alcohol.
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- In Hyman's rendering, republished by Houghton-Mifflin in
- 1989, the items that Red Riding Hood carries to her grandmother
- include wine that, the text says, would "do her a world of
- good." Worse, once Grandma drinks some, she not only feels
- "strong and healthy" but also displays, in an illustration, a
- red nose. Though the book is on the state's list of recommended
- reading for five- and six-year-olds, shocked officials (while
- not banning Little Red Riding Hood itself) eliminated this
- version. Explained spokeswoman Vera Jashi: "We have a very
- strong alcohol- and drug-abuse program in the district. This
- book gives us a double message."
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