At any rate,Nim's Island
Another similarity between Pippi and Nim is that both girls are 'home' schooled with their father's teaching them what they deem important for the girls' survival. These skills are not in the ordinary way: both girls are very talented in understanding the languages of animals and have a fine sense of the sea and of island living. They know how to make what they need from whatever is around them and because of their rather unusual educations, are not at all afraid to try something 'new'. Indeed, to them 'new' is not really even a concept. They create as they go, as naturally as they breathe. The image presented of 'home' schooling in these stories is quirky, perhaps, but hopeful. It seems to imply that if we provide our children with the freedom to learn and breathe and create, if we do not try to make them fit their thinking into a box, they will grow and learn and be thinking and intelligent beings capable of handling incredible challenges because that is what they have been prepared, in some sense, to do.
Now I have sons -- and one might think that they would not readily identify with female heroines but this has not been the case. Both Pippi and Nim, brave and bold and creative heroines, are also the embodiment of childhood. There is an almost genderless quality to the energy that they exude -- an adventurous and inventive excitement to their stories that draws the reader/listener in. No matter that you are a boy or an adult, Nim and Pippi speak to something deep inside and their successes and their fears are readily recognized