Children’s Book Review: The Seven Silly Eaters by Mary Ann Hoberman

About Children’s Book Reviews @ BeTwinned

Review by Sandra Horning

The Seven Silly Eaters
The Seven Silly Eaters by Mary Ann Hoberman, illustrated by Marla Frazee
Photo from Amazon.com

Does your child go for days eating nothing but macaroni and cheese? If so, then you can easily identify with Mrs. Peters and her seven, picky-eater children in The Seven Silly Eaters.

First born is Peter, who likes his milk not hot and not cold, but only warm. Then comes little Lucy, who only likes pink lemonade, freshly squeezed of course. And the picky eaters continue to be born through to the twins, Fran and Flo, who like eggs, one poached and the other fried. As the children keep popping out, Mrs. Peters becomes more and more overwhelmed by her children’s culinary demands.

Finally, the children resolve the chaos when they attempt to make their mother a birthday cake combining their favorite foods. The satisfying ending gives every mom hope that the chaos will some day end and suggests that while you are in the midst of the chaos, at least you should have a sense of humor about it.

The wonderful and amusing illustrations supporting the fun rhyming text perfectly depict all that goes on in a home with seven children. Parents and children alike will enjoy this entertaining tale.

Ages 4-8

Children’s Book Review: The Seven Silly Eaters by Mary Ann Hoberman

About Children’s Book Reviews @ BeTwinned
Review by Sandra Horning

The Seven Silly Eaters
Photo from Amazon.com

Does your child go for days eating nothing but macaroni and cheese? If so, then you can easily identify with Mrs. Peters and her seven, picky-eater children in The Seven Silly Eaters.

First born is Peter, who likes his milk not hot and not cold, but only warm. Then comes little Lucy, who only likes pink lemonade, freshly squeezed of course. And the picky eaters continue to be born through to the twins, Fran and Flo, who like eggs, one poached and the other fried. As the children keep popping out, Mrs. Peters becomes more and more overwhelmed by her children’s culinary demands.

Finally, the children resolve the chaos when they attempt to make their mother a birthday cake combining their favorite foods. A very satisfying ending follows that gives every mom hope that the chaos will some day end and suggest that while you are in the midst of the chaos, at least you should have a sense of humor about it.

The wonderful and amusing illustrations supporting the fun rhyming text perfectly depict all that goes on in a home with seven children. Parents and children alike will enjoy this entertaining tale.

Ages 4-8

TwinWatch: Do take wooden nickels

About TwinWatch @ BeTwinned

by Diana Day

While nesting and neatening last night, I found two wooden nickels.

Just before going on a trip by myself, without my husband and our two-and-a-half-year old daughters, I tend to nest.

I think it’s a morbid impulse. I neaten and spruce things up so that if something tragic happens to me, I’ll leave behind a tranquil domestic scene as a reminder of me or as a comfort — I was here. Dwayne, I was your wife. Dinah and Djuna, I was your mother. I loved you all more than you’ll ever know.

I realize that a tranquil domestic scene is not typical when I am here, so I don’t know how my family will suddenly associate neatness and classy candle arrangements with me if I am gone. And I also realize that I have less chance of being tragically killed on an airplane than I do navigating the Los Angeles freeways like I do every day, but there I go, neatening anyway.

The wooden nickels I found during last night’s pre-trip domestic binge are souveniers from the “Train Ride to Santa” at Griffith Park’s Travel Town. We went for the first time this past year and loved it.

It was a nighttime event in a place we only ever go in the daytime, so that alone made it magical. We got to ride the little train to Santa’s Workshop through lights, fake snow and holiday music. Somehow the Travel Town staff had turned the desert into a winter wonderland.

We could redeem the wooden nickels for free train rides at Travel Town, but I don’t think we’ll ever use them for that. Not now, anyway. Finding them so suddenly made my heart leap into my throat.

I put them in my pocket, to take with me.

TwinWatch: Health tips for busy parents of twins/multiples

About TwinWatch @ BeTwinned

Doctor and mother of twins Barbara Barnett with some tips about when to call your doctor about a suspected ear infection.

by Barbara Barnett, M.D.

One of the toughest questions for me to answer is how parents know when to take their children to the doctor. If you wait too long, the window for precious treatment time is lost. However, if the child presents too early, an accurate diagnosis may be difficult.

Consider, for example, acute otitis media, better known as an ear infection.

Ear infections are the most common bacterial illness in children — over 5 million cases of acute otitis media occur each year, with 10 million antibiotic prescriptions and about 30 million annual visits to the doctor’s office. Fifty percent of antibiotic prescriptions for preschoolers in the U.S. are prescribed for ear infections. (F.Y.I. The average preschooler carries around 1 to 2 pounds of bacteria! These bacteria have had 3.5 billion years of experience resisting and surviving environment.)

An acute otitis media infection usually has an abrupt onset of illness. Middle ear fluid collects, and then the signs of a middle ear inflammation begin. The most common symptoms of an ear infection include fussiness, fever, pulling/rubbing at the ears, or changes in sleep or appetite.

New guidelines suggest starting antibiotic treatment only if symptoms do not improve within 48 to 72 hours. Surprisingly, 80 percent of children with acute otitis media do get better without antibiotics!

And for those children who do end up needing antibiotics, about 15 percent suffer from diarrhea or vomiting, and up to 5 percent have allergic reactions.

So don’t be surprised if your children’s doctor recommends “watchful waiting” for 48-72 hours. Fortunately, after 24 hours of watchful waiting about 60 percent of children feel better.

When in doubt, however, it’s always best just to go ahead and call your doctor.

TwinWatch: Introducing the Potty Chronicles

About TwinWatch @ BeTwinned

By Diana Day

The first in an occasional series about potty-training my two-and-a-half year old daughters.

They haven’t even looked at a potty once, not once, since they got their prizes.

I thought I was being clever by promising that Dinah and Djuna could have a reward for making the smallest step forward toward potty-training. All they had to do was sit and “try” to go, and they’d be able to pick out lunch boxes to pretend to go to school with. (Our girls learned about school from Blue’s Clues, and though they won’t start nursery school until this coming fall, they already love to play “going to school.”)

They had been interested in the toilet and in the concept of peeing for awhile but wouldn’t dare to sit on it until I offered the reward.

Djuna was very motivated by the lunch box offer and was the first to allow me to lift her onto the potty without a diaper on. But Dinah was afraid. I asked Djuna to tell her that there was nothing to be afraid of, and she did so, charmingly.

It was one of those moments when you feel the magic of having twins — Dinah, with her sister’s encouragement, agreed to take off her diaper and sit on the toilet.

The next day, we went to Target and chose the lunch boxes. I was in favor of the lunch boxes with the embroidered flowers and the velcro holder for a drink bottle, but Dinah chose the baseball-shaped lunch box, and Djuna chose the football-shaped lunch box.

And now they love to say “bye-bye” and “I’ll see you later” as they trudge through the house carrying their lunch boxes and wearing their rain boots.

The potty, however, is a distant memory.

Toy Review: Marble Run

About Toy Reviews @ BeTwinned

by Jane Day Rasmussen

Marble Run by Galt Toys
Image from www.galttoys.com

Name: Marble Run
Manufacturer: Galt Toys
Category: Building / Construction
Manufacturer’s Suggested Age Range: 4 – 8 years
CAUTION: Not for children under 36 months. Contains small parts (glass marbles).
Our tested age range: 3 – 5 years
Learning Components: Cooperative Play, Cause and Effect
Price Value: Three honey pots

Endless possibilities await the young builder with this set – hours of rolling fun! We liked it so much, we got another set and gave one to my son’s preschool – now it’s a favorite in his classroom too!

The set includes 24 building pieces in primary colors that can be made into all sorts of configurations for rolling marbles. The size of the pieces makes it easy for little hands to put together (and take apart too!) It includes six marbles, but you can always get more, as we did, for added excitement. It is fun to watch the marbles maneuver through the maze and see where they’ll end up!

Multiples can work together to build one big run, or they can share the pieces and build their own.

Just make sure your kids are past the putting-everything-in-their-mouth stage, otherwise this toy would be a nightmare. [See note of caution above.] It was never really a problem with my son, so we started playing with this toy before he was three – he would watch me put together the pieces, and then he would have a blast putting the marbles in and watching them go.

The maker of this toy has other marble runs for older kids that looked pretty neat too. Check out www.galttoys.com.

Twin identity: Celebrating twinship and developing sense of self

by Diana Day

Dr. Eileen Pearlman is director of Twinsight and co-author of Raising Twins: What Parents Want to Know (And What Twins Want to Tell Them).

Dr. Pearlman, an identical twin herself, is a licensed Marriage, Family and Child Therapist who specializes in twins and twin parenting.

In this Q & A with BeTwinned.com, Dr. Pearlman discusses identity development in twins and multiples and what parents can do to celebrate being a twin or multiple and to also create healthy individuals.

BeTwinned.com: When are twins and multiples aware of themselves as different, or aware of themselves as a pair, or more, as the case may be?

Dr. Eileen Pearlman: It’s between 5 to 6 months old when they start becoming aware that there’s someone else there and that the mirror image is not themselves, it’s another person.

BeTwinned.com: Is there a point at which they are aware that there’s an “otherness,” a sense that they are somehow different than children who are born one at a time?

EP: Regarding the separation and individuation process for everyone, the first three months of even a singleton’s life is usually spent in an autistic state, a womb-like state. The infant needs to be fed and quieted and comforted and also dry. And there’s not much interaction with anyone outside.

Between three to six months they’re breaking out of the state of autism, and they’re becoming more aware of mommy or daddy taking care of them.

This is a symbiotic stage when the mommy and baby are like one, or the daddy and baby are like one; the mother tries to read her child’s needs. So twins are not very aware of each other between birth and six months old. And then, at about six months old, all of a sudden, they’re starting to become aware, in little glimpses at a time, of another in their life, whether it’s mommy as a separate person and then later on a sibling, a twin, as a separate person.

When you’re holding a young baby in your arms and when they touch your hair, they’re not really aware of whether it’s your hair or theirs — it’s all one. You and baby are one. And as they get older, they become aware that it is your hair, when they touch it, is not theirs. From six months to 36 months, they branch out more into the separation-individuation process. Little by little, they become more and more aware of themselves as being separate from other.

Some things twins do to find out whether they’re separate from one another – they hit up against one another, or they bump up against others. If I bump up against you, I know that that’s not me, that’s you, and this is me. They’re starting to be able to tell what’s “me,” and what’s “not me.” This occurs during the “terrible twos,” when everything is “no” to mommy and daddy. They’re not only saying no to mommy and daddy, they’re also saying no to each other.

You’ll also notice that at 18 months or two years old, they’ll start biting and fighting with one another. It’s because they’re starting to separate and individuate from each other. They’re realizing, that’s “me” and that’s “not me.”

Concerns about biting happens to be one of the most frequent questions parents will ask around 18 months to two or three years of age. Twins don’t have much language at that time. With so much emotion and exploration of their senses, they just put everything in their mouths, and sometimes it happens to be the other person. At first when one twin bites the other twin, they’re probably just as frightened as the one being bitten. All of a sudden, they realize that that’s someone else they’ve bitten. That’s part of the awareness that there’s another person and this other person is separate from me.

BeTwinned.com: Should parents cultivate a sense of specialness in their twins or multiples, a sense of you are twins, you are multiples, or is it more important to cultivate individuality, or both?

EP: There is a unique relationship that twins have with each other, some twins more than others. Monozygotic twins tend to have a closer relationship than dizygotic, but that may not always be the case. So if there’s a close relationship, cultivate that — why say, “You can’t be friends?” It’s also very important to cultivate individuality – encourage twins to see themselves as separate, independent individuals because it’s eventually what they’re going to be in the world.

A lot of people make twins special because they’re twins — and it is rare to have someone born at the same time as you. It’s part of who you are as a twin — but it’s not all of who you are. A twin is a unique individual who also happens to be a twin. I think twins get a lot of accolade and attention for just being born a twin. And sometimes twins feel that they don’t have to do anything special because they get recognition for just being born this way. They may not live up to their potential because they’re getting attention for their twinship.

BeTwinned.com: Related to that, how important is it for twins to see themselves reflected in movies, books, TV shows? Do they need to see themselves out there in the world, reflected back at themselves? Should parents make sure to have books about twins, for example, or is that just giving them more attention for being twins?

EP: They are twins, and that’s reality, and I think that having some books about twins and twinship is great. I don’t mean to say that twins shouldn’t feel special because they’re twins, it’s just that that shouldn’t be all of who they are. They are individuals and they are also twins. Seeing themselves just as twins is limiting.

[It’s good to read] books to children about them being twins, because they are faced with challenges non-twins do not face – they have to share earlier than non-twins, they have to share their grade in school, maybe they have to share some friends. Given the challenges that twins face, I think it’s important to see that other twins are facing these similar challenges.

When we see twins that are more the exception rather than the rule – these are twins who are always dressed alike, and are treated as one person, or twins that are labeled the “good twin” and the “evil twin” – when twins are being sensationalized, I think that is not at all helpful.

BeTwinned.com: In BeTwinned toy reviews, we want to review toys that are good for sharing, but we also want to review toys that are simply great toys even if they are really best played with alone. Is it OK for parents of twins to buy toys that belong just to one twin, or should twins share everything? And, is it OK for parents of twins and multiples to double-up on some special or highly-desired toys? At first, I was afraid I was spoiling my kids if I bought them each a their own Thomas train, for example.

EP: It’s not just OK, it’s important. In order to be able to share something, you first have to own something. You can’t go straight to sharing. First it has to be learned that this is mine, and then that’s yours, and then OK, we can share.

For someone to have ownership is really important because sometimes what’s on the outside is what is reflected on the inside. If I have my own toys and my own clothes, that means I’m my own person. If I have to share everything on the outside, then do I also have to share my identity and myself inside? So the inside and the outside work together in this way. I think it’s important for parents to be able to give twins their own toys, to be able to have their own thing that they covet. This gives them a sense of ownership, a sense of pride, a sense of identity. Yes, I can see where swings and big-ticket items you could have one that they have to share. But there are certain things where they may want to have one of their own. Maybe they want something a little different, or maybe they want the same thing.

I remember when the Cabbage Patch dolls were in, and one mother told me she was going to get one of her twins a Cabbage Patch doll and the other one something else. And I said, “Well, what if they both want a Cabbage Patch?” Even if they were both singletons, they may both want a Cabbage Patch doll.

It is important for parents to follow their children’s lead to see if they want the same or if they want something different. And if there’s something that’s coveted, we need to listen to them. If they both want to take ballet, fine. But if one wants to take ballet and one wants to take gymnastics, it’d be better to say, OK, this is what I need to do right now. If you both want to take it, fine, but if not, it’s all right.

BeTwinned.com: That’s very empowering. You feel pressure from society’s values that they must always share and that you’re spoiling them if you buy them two Thomases or two Cabbage Patches.

EP: No, you’re not spoiling them at all. There is a lot of pressure. I had a mother in my group just last week – she has 15 month old twin boys. She said, “They should be sharing, they should be the same.” And I said, “Why should they be the same? Even identical twins are not the same.” We need to see where each of them is, and we need to see where they overlap. Sometimes the overlap may be great. I use the example of one twin being a red circle and the other being a yellow circle, there are places where they overlap to make orange. Sometimes there is a big overlap and sometimes there’s not. There’s a lot of red and yellow in each one and there’s orange. So you have to pay attention to all of that.

BeTwinned.com: As twins get older and get ready to go to school, should parents look for schools that allow flexibility in classroom placement, or should there be a set rule that twins should not be in the same classroom?

EP: There should be not be a rule regarding twins being placed together or apart. Some twins flourish quite well being apart. Some twins who haven’t spent any time apart from each another and have not had their own individual identity established, may have a difficult time in separate classrooms. It may be very traumatic for them. So we have to take little steps – put them together in Kindergarten or pre-school and little by little, gradually get them to spend some time apart. So, it depends on the twin pair and on the twins themselves. And, each year, their needs may change. It is a good idea to evaluate the school placement on a year-to-year basis with the children and the school. Maybe one year they’ll do well together and another year they won’t do well together.

For example, maybe they’ve been apart for the first and second grade, and then for third grade one teacher is really great and one of them is really marginal. You may think, well, gee, which one of them am I going to sacrifice? You may think, this may be a time for me to put them both in the same class. Or maybe one teacher specializes in science, and they both really love science – you may think that it’s a good year to put them together. If they’re really clinging to one another and having a hard time separating or if they’re feeling a lot of competition – maybe one is further ahead than the other — you may think it’s too much pressure on the twin pair and it may be better if they were in separate classes. Sometimes if twins are constantly checking with each other all the time, they are not doing their own work and are not progressing as far as they can.

Also, it’s really important for parents to have separate conferences with each teacher for each child. Sometimes the teacher will only hold one conference for both children. In those cases, many parents say they leave the conference and they don’t remember what was said about each child. Twins are two separate individuals who need two separate conferences. They have separate needs. In the conference, we want to talk about the specific child and as a part of the conference, how the twins relate to each other, but not for the whole conference.

BeTwinned.com: I try to let people know right away which twin is which and who is wearing what color today. Some people make jokes as if they’re not even going to try to tell the twins apart, but I still try to tell them who is who.

EP: Good for you. What does it tell the twin [when people don’t try]? It tells the twin “I don’t really care to know who you really are? Why bother?” People come up to the twins in the stroller and say, “Double trouble, double this, double that.” Well, what does the child feel? They might feel that they’re a lot of trouble or that people don’t even care to know who they are.

BeTwinned.com: What are common misconceptions about the identity development of twins?

EP: There are a lot of myths about twins. Some people, teachers, parents, aunts, uncles think that there’s a good twin and a bad twin or that there’s always a leader and always a follower. It has to do a lot with labeling of twins. The parents have to help the twins figure out that we don’t label. We tell parents that when people ask, “Which one is the fussy one?” to say, “We don’t label. Sometimes one is and then the other.”

Yes, people will be asking, and I understand that it’s their way of telling the differences, of telling them apart. Sometimes they label which one is the reader or which one is the mathematician, when maybe they both are, or neither. People tend to do that — the constant comparison and the labeling. I think that this can be hurtful because once you have the label, it’s hard to remove that from becoming a self-fulfilling prophecy.

BeTwinned.com: Is there a common misconception that twins will always be in their own world and can’t relate to the other kids on the playground or that they will have social development problems?

EP: I think some people do have that perception, particularly with same sex twins, and especially when they’re younger. People think that they’re always going to be together. We see that sometimes on television or in movies that twins are always together, they don’t have individual friends. There’s all kinds of myths about twins – they will not be friendly with their other siblings; there’s always a dominant one and a passive one; do they have ESP?

In my book I talk about the myth that twins are supposed to be best friends. Well, sometimes they’re not best friends. Sometimes they have different personalities and different temperaments and different likes and dislikes. They may clash at times. So, they’re not always going to be best friends with each other all the time. For twins who are more similar in their temperaments, they may be best friends much of the time, but that’s not always the case. Some children are just automatically more social, and they want to be with their twin, but they also want to be with others as well. They’re children, and sometimes they may want to play together and sometimes they may want to play apart.

TwinWatch: Pairs trump in a house of twins

About TwinWatch @ BeTwinned

by Diana Day

Since I can remember, my two-and-a-half year old twin daughters have selected toys in pairs or have playacted in pairs.

For example, one of the first “skits” they perform is the Charlie Brown and Lucy football scene – you know the one, where Lucy tries to get Charlie Brown to kick the football? They each take a part, act out the scene, complete with a miniature football prop, and then they switch parts. They also play Zak and Wheezie (the two-headed dragon) from Dragon Tales, Pip and Pop, purple twin otters from Bear in the Big Blue House, and Thomas and Gordon, two of the main characters from Thomas the Tank Engine.

One of my favorites is when they act out Thing 1 and Thing 2, Dr. Seuss’ rambunctious pair from The Cat in the Hat. Dinah decided one day that she was Thing 2 and that Djuna was Thing 1. When they play Thing 1 and Thing 2, they run around the house pretending to fly a fishbowl on a kite string. Fun.

[Note: In fact, the appearance of Thing 1 and Thing 2 in The Cat in the Hat is a metaphorical description of carrying, giving birth to and raising twins:

“I call this game FUN-IN-A-BOX,”
Said the cat.
“In this box are two things
I will show to you now.
You will like these two things,”
Said the cat with a bow.
“I will pick up the hook.
You will see something new.
Two things. And I call them
Thing One and Thing Two.
These Things will not bite you.
They want to have fun.”
Then, out of the box
Came Thing Two and Thing One!
And they ran to us fast.
They said, “How do you do?
Would you like to shake hands
With Thing One and Thing Two?”

(And then Thing One and Thing Two proceed to create delicious havoc in the house.)]

As far as toy pairs, Dinah has enjoyed her “Maggies” for ages. Maggie is one of Fisher-Price’s ® Little People, and Dinah has three of them (in case we lose one). She always plays with two Maggies at a time. She never refers to them as twins though, so my husband and I have never been sure if she perceives her Maggies as a pair. We just know that when she plays with Maggie, she has to have two of them.

Dwayne and I don’t know if they playact pairs because it’s a natural choice — there is always a sib around to take the other part — or if they actually perceive themselves as part of a duo, and therefore integrate duos into their play.

With two-and-a-half year olds, I guess it could be anything, for any reason.

Children’s Book Review: Mama Mama by Jean Marzollo

About Children’s Book Reviews @ BeTwinned

review by Sandra Horning

Mama Mama by Jean Marzollo
Mama Mama by Jean Marzollo, illustrated by Laura Regan

image from Amazon.com

In honor of Mother’s Day this weekend, I couldn’t resist my favorite book celebrating moms and babies. Mama Mama is a heartwarming and gentle poem to comfort you and your baby.

Both of my sons loved this book when they were one and two.

The rhyming text on each page describes how each animal mama cares for and loves its baby. The illustrations portray realistic animals, such as a panda bear cuddling with her baby and a koala bear carrying her baby on her back.

This dear board book is a part of the “Harper Growing Tree” series. (Jean Marzollo also happens to be the author of the popular I Spy books.)

Mama Mama is a lovely tribute to all mothers and their babies.

Happy Mother’s Day!

Ages 0-2

TwinWatch: Meanwhile, back at the ranch …

About TwinWatch @ BeTwinned

by Diana Day

Daddy reading to Dinah and Djuna
Daddy reading to Djuna
and Dinah

I had the opportunity to meet movie producer Bonnie Arnold the other day at a press junket for the upcoming DreamWorks animated feature Over the Hedge (very cute movie, funny, well worth seeing … best for kids who can handle the loud, raucous scenes and the scary bear, very effectively voiced by Nick Nolte; I’ll link to the feature I’m writing when it comes out on May 19, the day of the movie’s release).

Bonnie Arnold produced Toy Story, one of my all-time favorite movies. For having produced such a classic movie, she didn’t appear to have too many secrets of success. She really had one message: tell a good story, and try to work with other people who want to tell a good story too.

In journalism school, learning to tell good stories is a recurring theme. Years ago, in the early 90s, when I was learning to teach kids how to read, it was all about story structure and how kids come to us primed for enjoying and retaining the basic structure of a good story.

But seeing my kids learning to love a good story is more thrilling than seeing it as a writer or as a teacher.

My daughters Dinah and Djuna, 2 1/2, both love to “read” their books. We have truckloads of books and magazines in the house for them to enjoy, and we are starting to appreciate our local library now that the girls don’t run up and down the aisles, giggling wildly. My husband and I read to them at every naptime and bedtime and every time they ask during the day.

They both read stories from memory, as so many kids do. Djuna almost always starts off her retellings by saying, “One day … .”

From a reading specialst’s point of view, this amazes me and proves everything I learned in my teacher’s training. Kids do come with a knack, an instinct, for internalizing story structure.

“One day … ” is the beginning of every story. First, the scene is set, and then “one day” brings you to the problem in the story — that specific day when everything is different from all the other days before it, as in: One day, Miss Gulch came and took Dorothy’s dog away from her family …

And, then, recently, I heard Djuna start to insert a new word into her memory retellings — meanwhile. This excited me even more. Meanwhile! A great transitional word, a word that introduces a plot complication, as in: Meanwhile, as Dorothy ran away from home through the countryside, a great storm was brewing.

When I was a fifth and sixth grade teacher, I often had parents come in and look to me for solidarity when they would turn their noses up at serial books like Nancy Drew mysteries or Bobbsey Twins books, or any number of other formula pulp fiction for kids. (These parents wanted their kids to be reading only high class literature that could guarantee admission to Harvard.)

I was never an ally for these types. I lived and breathed Nancy Drew as a kid, and I still managed to become a successful adult. And now, I firmly believe that anything that reinforces story structure, even if it’s bland and predictable — and sometimes, because it’s predictable — is great for kids to read.

Predictable story structures, complete with their one days and their meanwhiles, are what give children the bedrock they need to deal with more complicated literature, as in: One day, Hamlet returned from college to find his father dead and his mother remarried to his uncle. Meanwhile, people were seeing the ghost of Hamlet’s murdered father out and about in the castle …