Dear Mr Hargreaves,
As a father of two small children, and as a former child
myself, I have generally enjoyed your Mr Men series of books, notwithstanding
the often unnecessarily verbose text, which makes some of them feel like
novellas and inspires a sense of dread when I am asked to read three of them in
succession before bedtime, and has led to my subconscious use of 79 words in
this particular paragraph when 10 would clearly, obviously, and undoubtedly
have sufficed.
However, that is neither here nor there. The reason for
my letter is that I wish to complain about an unfair national stereotype
perpetuated by your books.
From my repeated readings of the Mr Men canon, I have
learnt that Mr Happy lives in Happyland, Mr Clever lives in Cleverland and Mr
Nonsense lives in Nonsenseland. This makes sense, in the same way that Thais
live in Thailand, Finns live in Finland and northern ire lives in Northern Ireland.
So, why does Mr Clumsy live in Australia?
That’s right, Mr Clumsy does not live in Clumsyland. He
lives in Australia.
This, Mr Hargreaves, is nothing but offensive national
stereotyping.
Please understand, Mr Hargreaves, that although we recently had a prime minister who tried to eat an onion like it was an apple, and a deputy prime minister who was unaware that he was a citizen of New Zealand, we are not all idiots. I will admit that two of the four members of my household are unable to tie their shoelaces, but this is because they are aged one and two respectively. The fact that they are Australian is purely coincidental.
Perhaps political correctness had not yet gone mad when
you introduced Mr Clumsy in 1976, but since then it has become certifiable. As
such, I request that when the series is next reprinted, Mr Clumsy should come
from Clumsyland rather than Australia. At the very least he should hold dual
citizenship, which admittedly would preclude him from running for Australian parliament,
but in any case we have enough oafish behaviour in that institution without
adding Mr Clumsy to the mix.