Reading Notes: Mr. Miacca, Reading B

This story is about a boy that sometimes was a troublemaker. His mom always told him that if he kept being bad, Mr. Miacca would take him from the street while he was playing outside. Mr. Miacca threw Tommy (the boy) in a bag and took him to his home. He tells the boy he's going to eat him for dinner, and tells his wife Sally that he has dinner ready. Mr. Miacca realizes he forgot herbs to put on the boy, so he tells his wife to watch Tommy while he goes and gets some. Tommy talks to Sally about if her husband always eats boys, and she says yes. Tommy tells Sally she should like pudding instead, and offers his mom's homemade pudding for her. Sally is foolish and let's Tommy convince her to go home and fetch her some pudding then come right back. Tommy was then free from Mr Miacca until he was bad once again.

Tommy got snatched by Mr Miacca again, and Mr Miacca is angry with him about running away. Tommy was supposed to get boiled, but the water wouldn't heat up. Mr Miacca got angry and didn't want to wait, so he said he's going to cut off one of Tommy's legs to throw in. He does so, then calls for Sally but no one answered. When he went to look for Sally, Tommy ran away, because the leg he put into the pot was not his but the leg of the sofa instead. Tommy never left home being bad again.

If I rewrote this story, I'd have it to where Tommy doesn't get away the first time. This would make Sally and him create a pact that she'd protect him, and then Tommy ends up finding a home with Mr and Mrs Miacca.

Bibliography
"Mr. Miacca." English Fairy Tales. Joseph Jacobs, 1890.

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