" ▶▶▶ September 2010 | Children's Books "

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Check Out Once a mouse--: A fable cut in wood

Once a mouse--: A fable cut in wood Review



Described in its day as attaining, "a fluidity rare in the medium", this illustrated book of woodcuts tells a simple fable that has remained beloved for decades. Claiming to be a tale told from ancient India, the story follows a man, a mouse, and the downfall of pride. A wise hermit lives alone in the forest when he happens to spy a mouse about to be eaten. Fearful for the little creature, the man changes his new friend into a cat. When a dog threatens his cat, he turns the mouse into a dog, and then (after a similar situation) into a tiger. Now a fine feline of a beast, the former mouse lords his newfound state over the other animals of the forest. After planning the death of his benefactor, the man changes the tiger into a mouse again and everything goes back to as it was (with the mouse, I suspect, a little wiser).

The woodcuts are fine indeed. Delicate little illustrations imbued with life and verve. From snarling dogs to transformed mice the images stand for themselves. I hadn't been aware of the author/illustrator's work before reading her winning, "Stone Soup". After comparing the two, I have to say they're definitely of equal interest. It's nice to see a book giving a clear sighted look at a fable from another country (in this case, India) without any stereotypes or racism. All in all, it's a nice little book with a strong moral core.




Once a mouse--: A fable cut in wood Overview


"No one shall tell me that I was once a mouse!" roars the tiger. But an old hermit, mighty at magic, does tell him; for it was he who first changed the tiger from a wretched little mouse to a stout cat, to a big dog, and finally, to his proud and royal self. Youngest readers will take special delight in seeing these changes take place in Marcia Brown's dramatic picturing of the tiger's fall from grace. Older boys and girls will read more meaning into the text.

A rajah of ancient India is said to have had such popular animal fables collected as a "mirror for princes" to instruct his errant sons. Marcia Brown retells this fable from the Hitopadesa in vigorous style and illustrates it in woodcuts of exceptional quality. With a fluidity rare in the medium, they achieve the difficult feat of retaining their strong appeal for children while captivating art lovers of all ages.


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Customer Reviews


Good story with unique illustrations - Veronica -
My daughter who is 6 has loved this story since she was 4. Nicely written with very unique illustrations, the story teaches a nice moral in a folktale manner. Short story that gets to the point.



The India version of "don't get too big for your britches..." - Robert Schmidt - Honolulu, HI USA
An Indian hermit saves a mouse. With a little bit of magic, he turns the mouse into increasingly ferocious animals, until the mouse {now a tiger) threatens the hermit. With this, the hermit decides it is time the "tiger" once more becomes a timid mouse.

The art is earthy, the story is engaging for those young of heart and mind, and those with a heart and mind, and the book is beautifully constructed.

What more can one say? Author Marcia Brown, I understand, won a Caldecott Medal for her illustrations in Once A Mouse in 1962. That certainly says something about the quality of this children's book.



An excellent and ancient tale from India just right for children - Charles Ashbacher - Marion, Iowa United States(cashbacher@yahoo.com)
This story is an ancient fable from India; the difference here is that the images are rendered in woodcuts. An old hermit witnesses a tiny mouse about to be devoured by a crow so he runs to it and chases the crow away. Taking pity on the defenseless mouse, he uses his magic powers to turn it into a cat. However, when a larger cat arrives, he turns his cat into a bigger one. After this a dog comes after the cat so he turns it into an even bigger dog. Finally, when a tiger comes after the dog, he turns it into an even bigger tiger.
At this time the tiger begins to believe he is lord of the forest and the hermit chastises him, pointing out that if it weren't for him, he wouldn't even be alive. This infuriates the tiger, so it plots to kill the old man. At this point, the hermit reads the tiger's mind and turns him back into a frightened mouse that runs away.
There is an excellent moral lesson in this tale for children and the woodcuts are strongly and effectively executed, giving the images a quality unlike the usual illustrations in children's books. It is easy to see why this book was a winner of the Caldecott medal.




Superlative pictures tell a story and win the Prize. - mcHaiku - Brown County INDIANA
"Once A Mouse" is a fable from India adapted by Marcia Brown who won the Caldecott medal in 1962 for the marvelous woodcuts in this book. As the title page states, it is "a fable cut in wood."

The artistry of woodcuts has always intrigued me and Marcia Brown is totally successful in translating animal emotions, whether scared or scary, bemused or 'lording it' over all. See the dog's wonderful snarling nose and the hermit whose unsurprised, philosophical face contrasts with the haughty tiger who "peacocked about the forest."

The reader is left, like the hermit, to meditate "on big and little" . . . and about how humans, like tigers, can get too big for their britches. Teachers can guide lively discussions even among the youngest - - who will learn to say "chided" - - a gentle word that should be on the world's list of 'protected species'. Reviewer mcHaiku cheers for the works Marcia Brown has shared which are so satisfactory at all levels.






*** Product Information and Prices Stored: Sep 28, 2010 17:30:05

Thursday, September 23, 2010

Great Price for

No Roses for Harry Review



I am so excited!! today I was seeing a patient in Greenville, South carolina and much to my surprise, sitting on the floor of her home was, No Roses for Harry. When I was a child (I am currently 54) this was one of my favorite books. When I had my children I tried to find this series of Harry books but could not remember the names. Oh so depressing. My depression lifted today. At this point in my life I have college and high school students, but the future is bright. Maybe my grandchildren can now benefit. So excited. I can guarantee any youngster will sit down and listen to this book, over and over again.




No Roses for Harry Overview


The popular hero of Harry the Dirty Dog does his best to be rid of Grandmother’s birthday present—a silly green sweater with yellow roses.‘Will bring laughter and sympathy. Recommended for all picture book collections.’ —SLJ.




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Customer Reviews


No Roses for Harry! - not what I was expecting - Jennifer Colverson -
I was very disappointed with this purchase. Whilst the story and illustrations are exactly as I remembered them from my childhood, I was upset about the particular edition that I received. I was expecting a much larger book in a different format. I purchased Harry the Dirty Dog at the same time as I made this purchase and it came to me in the format I was expecting - gorgeous. Perhaps I did not read the description well enough - but it certainly was not made clear in the photo of the product.



Favourite childen's book - Karen Found - Toronto, Ont., Canada
This book is available in Canada but often is sold out. I am in poor health and ordering from Amazon is so convenient for me. Thing always arrive quickly and in good shape. This was no exception. Thank you!



We love Harry - Mary - High Mountains of Wyoming
We came across the Harry books at our library and my daughter (2) loved them so much that I purchased them for her. They are so much fun to read.



Harry is Universal - S. LAMONTAGNE - Eastern Pennsylvania
There is something universal about the appeal of Harry the dog and his adventures. Little children who have pets in their home environment will easily identify with ALL the 'Harry' stories.

*** Product Information and Prices Stored: Sep 24, 2010 00:00:05

Check Out Greek Symbol Mystery (The Nancy Drew mystery stories)

Greek Symbol Mystery (The Nancy Drew mystery stories) Review



Loved Nancy Drew as a child and still love her at the age of 41. I was thrilled to find a Nancy Drew book that takes place in Greece. I recently came back from seeing relatives there and it was quite fun to travel the country with Nancy. It was like I was there all over again. Fun!!!





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Customer Reviews


I Quite agree! - joel hadsall - STOCKTON, CA, US
I have not read the story yet but am quite intruged that it about greece! i have allways wanted to go there! i love nancy drew but this one caught my eye with the word greek involved LOL! i will share my feellimg about it after i read it!
- KiKi










*** Product Information and Prices Stored: Sep 23, 2010 18:15:05

Friday, September 17, 2010

Great Price for $3.26

Ninth Key (The Mediator, Book 2) Review



The novel starts off with Suze being at a pool party. While Suze is at this pool party, she meets an attractive guy named Tad Beaumount. After the party, Suze wakes up in the middle of the night to a screaming ghost of a woman. The woman tells Suze to tell someone named 'Red' that he didn't kill her.

With the help of her friends CeeCee and Adam, Suze tracks down a multi-millionaire businessman with the nickname of Red. Suze also finds out that Tad Beaumount is the son of this multi-millionaire. Jesse warns Suze not to get in contact with Red and that it would only cause trouble. Suze ignores Jesse's warnings and gets in contact with Red. Soon Suze finds out that Jesse's warnings were right and that things are not as they seem.

'The Ninth Key' Was a really interesting book but I just don't think it was as great as 'Shadowland'.
Don't get me wrong, I definitely enjoyed this book but it could have been improved a bit.
There were events that were very suspenseful and had me on the edge of my seat but most of these events were kind of un-necessary (You'll have to read the book to find out because it would spoil the book if I said why they were unneccessary).
I also agree with another reviewer that said that this book would have been better if it had been a short story or if it had been a part in the first book.



Ninth Key (The Mediator, Book 2) Feature


  • ISBN13: 9780060725129
  • Condition: New
  • Notes: BUY WITH CONFIDENCE, Over one million books sold! 98% Positive feedback. Compare our books, prices and service to the competition. 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed



Ninth Key (The Mediator, Book 2) Overview


Everything is going great for Suze. Her new life in California is a whirlwind of parties and excellent hair days. Tad Beaumont, the hottest boy in town, has even asked Suze out on her very first date. Suze is so excited that she's willing to ignore her misgivings about Tad... particularly the fact that he's not Jesse, whose ghostly status--not to mention apparent disinterest in her--make him unattainable.

What Suze can#146;t ignore, however, is the ghost of a murdered woman whose death seems directly connected to dark secrets hidden in none other than Tad Beaumont's past.


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Customer Reviews


Ninth Key - E. Barlow - Houston
This is definately one of the best Mediator books. I downgraded it to 4 stars (****) because it had so little to do with ghosts, which is the whole point of the series. I mean, the murderer killed soon-to-be ghosts, but that's pretty much it, besides the fiasco with Doc's mother. This is overall a good book and a recommeded quick read.



mediator fan - -
i love this whole series. i am a 16 year@old girl and i absolutely love them. it is a bit of romance that meets action that meets mystery. they are fun to read and you wont be able to put them down. i hope you have as much fun reading them as i did. they are worth the money.



Best so far - Sarah - Indiana
High school cali girl/ 10th grader Suze Simon wakes up in her bed with a blood curdleing scream. Its a ghost, screaming and sobbing uncontrolably. "You have to tell Red he didn't kill me." Suze trys to put two and two together and looks up Red and finds Red Beaumount. When Suze schedules a meeting with Red Beaumount, she meets Marcus, Red's brother. Red thinks, well Red B. thinks he's a.... but he's not. But Red really is... And Marcus really tries to... and Jesse saves... and [blank] killed others too.

So as you see its really a good mystery, and trust I revealed nothing to you, so you have to read it to answer these blanks!



Pretty Good Urban Fantasy - S. L. Davis - Watson, LA
I really like Susannah's character because she kind of sassy and a "kick butt" kind of girl. She's got a really strong personality but it has many of the issues that a teen girl faces...being embarrassed...wanting a boyfriend, and all that.

All in all, this is turning out to be a solid series in the genre of urban fantasy and I highly recommend.

*** Product Information and Prices Stored: Sep 17, 2010 15:30:08

Check Out Skinnybones (Passports)

Skinnybones (Passports) Review



This book is my all time favorite book. It is very interesting because it has a very good plot. Often I understood exactly how alex (the main character in skinnybones) felt. For example, when my friend popped a hole in a blow up chair, then I sat on it and it slowly made air come out of the chair and it made it look like I did it. I felt embarassed and stupid. The same thing happened to alex when he was playing a baseball game in front of a big crowd. Alex ran up to this kid named T.J and started poking him in the chest saying booga booga. Alex got so embarassed he ran home and never wanted to say the words booga booga again. This book also has other good characters. There's not one thing I don't like about this book. I say if you want a book you can enjoy and have fun with, I'd choose skinnybones.




Skinnybones (Passports) Overview


Play Ball???

"I've played Little League baseball for six years now. But to tell you the truth, I'm not exactly what you'd call a real good athlete. Actually, I'm not even real okay. Basically, what I'm trying to say here is, I stink."

For the smallest kid on the baseball team, Alex "Skinnybones" Frankovitch has a major-league bigmouth! But even Alex knows he's gone too far when he brags his way into a pitching contest with T.J. Stoner, the best baseball player -- and biggest creep -- in the entire school. What a mistake! This might be one mess that not even Alex can talk his way out of--


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The funniest book I have ever read ! - Debbie Tinkham -
I purchased this book to read to my grand kids on a family camping trip. It was so funny it had to be shared with everyone. We would sit around the campfire in the morning and again at night passing the book around the circle each person taking a turn reading aloud. There were times the book had to be passed to the next person because the reader was laughing so hard they could not speak. The campers in the next camp spot heard us and asked to borrow the book. They too laughed so hard we could hear them from our spot. This is an excellent family book for boys and girls and adults who want to laugh.



I laughed so hard my sides hurt! - Grace Defloreis - New York
"My cat eats Kitty Fritters because....I figure if she didn't she would probably be dead by now."

I don't know what it is about this book, but it's the funniest thing. It's breezy, fun, and feels like the author didn't even edit it, just put down the first thing that came to her mind.

It must be over 10 years since I've read Skinnybones, and I still love it!



Very funny - B. Burk - UT
I read this book aloud to my fourth graders at the beginning of the year and they loved it (both boys and girls). Park brought humor into the school atmopshere and brought my students together. My favorite part of the book is when skinnybones thought that bunting (from baseball) was hurling, it was very funny.



a classic - Clinton S. Harper - Austin, TX
This book is a must read for teachers of pre-teen boys. It captures their attention so well because it is all about their world. It is very entertaining and even your hestitant readers will love it!

*** Product Information and Prices Stored: Sep 17, 2010 09:00:11

Thursday, September 16, 2010

Check Out The Wee Free Men

The Wee Free Men Review



Consider yourself to have been grabbed by the lapels, shaken like a rag doll, and to have had me scream up your nasal passages, "YOU HAVE TO READ THIS BOOK!!"

The book's heroine, Tiffany Aching, is flat out the smartest character I have ever run across in fiction. She is so smart, I didn't even realize this is supposed to be a children's book until I found the sequel in the children's section at the library. It is worth the price of this book just to see Tiffany's mind working, never mind about the story. Or, if you're interested in the story, it goes something like this:

The Discworld and the Land of Dreams are colliding. The Queen of the Faeries has crossed over and stolen Tiffany's baby brother, taking him back to the Land of Dreams. On the face of it, this doesn't sound so bad until you realize that it's not those kind of dreams; it's the other kind. (Oh.) So, Tiffany picks up a frying pan, grabs an enchanted toad and sets out to rescue him by enlisting the aid of the Nac Mac Feegle, a.k.a. Wee Free Men a.k.a. pixies...er, picties. But they won't go because rescues aren't exactly in the playbook of these hand-sized, blue, kilt-wearing rascals. They stick to the five things they do the best: (1) stealing, (2) drinking, (3) fighting, (4) drinking and fighting, and (5) stealing and drinking and fighting. So Tiffany asks them to help her steal back her baby brother. "Aye! Now yer talkin'!"

There's a magic portal she needs to find, and then monsters to overcome and the siren-lure of dreams and illusions to avoid. The Queen will commit any atrocity in order to stop her, from conjuring magical snow storms to slowing time to bringing in a team of lawyers. And the tale is told in Terry Prachett's celebrated whimsical fashion. Be prepare to laugh out loud, time and time again.

And if you're wondering about the best children's book, ever, that would be the sequel: Hat Full of Sky.





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Wee Free Men - or Scots Wa-har - Teresa Pietersen - Texas, USA
You know what to expect from a Pratchett discworld novel, probably even if you've never read one before. Fantasy world, with layers upon layers of satire and humor thrown in. But only Pratchett could make up a highland dialect that is totally incomprehensable and yet you still understand what the wee men are on about at a subconscious level. The Nac Mac Feegle are wonderful, if tiny, hells angels of this fantasy world and yet, it works on so many levels. Well written characters as usual, an escape from reality but with so many reminders of your own life and loved ones.



Not just for young adults ... old adults too - Reader - Poway, CA United States
It is difficult to find enough adjectives of praise to do justice to Terry Pratchett's Discworld books (or his other works, such as Nation). He is the most consistently witty author of his generation, and of a few other generations as well. Some of the Discworld volumes are better than others, but the Tiffany Aching books stand out because they were intended as youth or young adult literature, and while I am sure they work very well as such, they also work on an adult level. The Wee Free Men / Nac Mac Feagles / Pictsies are a fabulous foil for the young heroine, and through all three volumes the dynamic between them, Tiffany and the various witches never becomes tiring. One of a true master's finest ....






The Wee Free Men - Amanda OBrien - Northern Ireland
The Wee Free Men is the story of Tiffany Aching, a wannabe witch, who goes to rescue her annoying little brother from the clutches of The Queen of Fairyland. It may sound like your run of the mill childrens' story but when you consider this comes from the genius of Terry Pratchett, it is anything but. Helping Tiffany are a swarm of tiny blue pictsies who live for stealing, fighting and drinking. Much to Tiffany's dismay she learns that they were previously banished from fairyland for being drunk and disorderly. So of course mayhem ensues.
What can I say about this book other than it is totally brilliant. I received the three Tiffany books as a present last year and have read them so many times the poor books are practically falling apart. Every time I need a pick-me-up I reach for them and even though I could almost quote passages I still find myself laughing out loud at the antics of the Nac Mac Feegles.
The two following books in this series are equally exceptional. There are wonderful new characters but I'm glad to say the Nac Mac Feegles are still the stars. As a lover of snow I have to say The Wintersmith is my personal favourite but The Hat Full of Sky is not to be missed. I am looking forward to the next in the series, in fact so much so I have already ordered my copy.


*** Product Information and Prices Stored: Sep 16, 2010 05:00:07

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Great Price for $3.50

Skellig (Printz Honor) Review



Michael is twelve years old, lives in his new house with his mom, dad and baby sister, who is very sick with a weak heart. One day while in the garage in his backyard, Michael finds an odd creature, a man, with a squeaky voice, bugs crawling all over him and tattered clothes.

Michael tells his best friend Mina about his discovery, he wants to make sure that what he is seeing is real and not just his imagination. Mina is homeschooled and has a passion for William Blake's poetry, which appears throughout the story.
We later find out that this creatures name is Skellig and that he has wings. What he truly is or where he has come from, remains a mystery. He is clearly sick and Michael decides he needs to nurse him back to health.

Michael's baby sisters illness is always on his mind, and he feels as though when he feels his own heart beating, he can also feel the baby's. I loved the thought of that.
I enjoyed this book very much. There's that bit of creepiness to the story, due to the way Skellig is described. And there is also that mystery as to what this creature really is. He seems to be angelic, but has features and habits that go against how we might think an angel would be.

Michael is likeable right away, he has a kind heart. He wants to nurse Skellig back to health. He visits him and brings him food. The way he loves and worries over his baby sister is also touching. His baby sisters illness is a big part of the story, as are his parents and the way they deal with it.
All in all, a great read. Highly recommended.

'Writing can be difficult, but sometimes it really does feel like a kind of magic. I think that stories are living things-among the most important things in the world.' -David Almond



Skellig (Printz Honor) Feature


  • ISBN13: 9780385326537
  • Condition: New
  • Notes: BUY WITH CONFIDENCE, Over one million books sold! 98% Positive feedback. Compare our books, prices and service to the competition. 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed



Skellig (Printz Honor) Overview


Young readers will by enchanted by this magical tale of friendship and family:

Michael was looking forward to his new house and neighborhood, until his infant sister became very ill. Now his parents are constantly frantic, the scary doctor is always coming around, and Michael feels helpless. When he goes out into the old rickety garage, he comes across a mysterious being living beneath spider webs and eating flies for dinner. This creature calls himself Skellig, and over the weeks Michael and his new friend Mina bring Skellig out in to the light, and their worlds change forever.


Skellig (Printz Honor) Specifications


"I thought he was dead. He was sitting with his legs stretched out and his head tipped back against the wall. He was covered with dust and webs like everything else and his face was thin and pale. Dead bluebottles were scattered on his hair and shoulders. I shined the flashlight on his white face and his black suit."

This is Michael's introduction to Skellig, the man-owl-angel who lies motionless behind the tea chests in the abandoned garage in back of the boy's dilapidated new house. As disturbing as this discovery is, it is the least of Michael's worries. The new house is a mess, his parents are distracted, and his brand-new baby sister is seriously ill. Still, he can't get this mysterious creature out of his mind--even as he wonders if he has really seen him at all. What unfolds is a powerful, cosmic, dreamlike tale reminiscent of Madeleine L'Engle's A Wrinkle in Time. British novelist David Almond works magic as he examines the large issues of death, life, friendship, love, and the breathtaking connections between all things.

Amidst the intensity and anxiety of his world, Michael is a normal kid. He goes to school, plays soccer, and has friends with nicknames like Leakey and Coot. It's at home where his life becomes extraordinary, with the help of Skellig and Mina, the quirky, strong-willed girl next door with "the kind of eyes you think can see right through you." Mina and her mother's motto is William Blake's "How can a bird that is born for joy / Sit in a cage and sing?" This question carries us through the book, as we see Michael's baby sister trapped in a hospital incubator; as we see the exquisite, winged Skellig crumpled in the garage; as we meet Mina's precious blackbird chicks and the tawny owls in her secret attic; and as we finally see a braver, bolder Michael spread his wings and fly. Skellig was the Whitbread Award's 1998 Children's Book of the Year, and this haunting novel is sure to resonate with readers young and old. (Ages 10 and older) --Karin Snelson

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A page turner - SONIA HONDRAKI - greece
I have three boys and this book has been a major success! Each one of them couldn't put it down. They were eager to wake up early in the morning to continue reading it. A must read!



Skellig Review - Nichole Vogelsinger - Sellersville, PA
Michael did not want to move to the creepy house on Falconer Road, but his family needed room for the new addition to the family: Joy, Michael's new baby sister. Their house is a real fixer upper and belonged to an old man who had just passed away. Somehow, their real estate agent managed to talk them into buying this old, run down house. But, as Michael's new sister becomes even sicker, she must be rushed back to the hospital leaving Michael all alone in this new, mysterious house.
Even though Michael was warned multiple times not to go into the abandoned garage, he still decides to go into this lone building. After a bit of exploring, Michael discovers something that will change his life forever...
Michael makes many good friends along the way including Mina and Skellig who are both magical in their own way. Reading this book will leave you with a good feeling. This book, Skellig, will help you, like it helped me, to realize that anything can be accomplished when you have people to support you and help you to accomplish your goals. Any person who loves a book that has a cross between science fiction and a feeling of hope will love this book, Skellig, by David Almond.




lovely tale for advanced young readers - Kelsey May Dangelo - Vermont
Michael's baby sister is desperately ill and he's moved to a new, run-down house, where he finds a mysterious arthritic, winged man in his garage. Is the man a bird or an angel or some new evolutionary creature? This gothic, dark, lyrical, dream-like tale is part mythology, part fairy tale, part poem. Beautiful, simple, and sweet, it is a great book for advanced young readers and adults. Grade: B+

*** Product Information and Prices Stored: Sep 15, 2010 23:30:05

Check Out Eric Carle's Animals Animals for $6.79

Eric Carle's Animals Animals Review



I had this book on the top shelf of the kids' (two year old boy and girl) bookcase for safe-keeping until they got a little older and a little better at page-turning. It's far too nice a book, I thought, to be torn and wrinkled by a couple of toddlers who can't even appreciate it. It contains a wonderful variety of poems, and Eric Carle's artwork is stunning. He devotes a two-page spread to most of the animals; the whale at the beginning takes up four pages.

At one point, one of the children spotted this book and expressed an interest, so I got it down and read a few poems to them. I carefully replaced it on the top shelf. They began requesting it more and more, and soon protested when I returned it to the shelf beyond their reach. I gave in, and let them leaf through it -- under my supervision. Finally realizing that it was senseless to limit their handling of this book they so obviously enjoyed, I moved the pristine hardcover to a lower shelf.

I had no idea that two-year-olds would enjoy this poetry so much. While some of the poems are certainly at their language level, many are more advanced, and the kids request those just as often. I frequently find them looking through the book, naming the animals ("duck-billed platypus") and quoting portions of the poems ("lays eggs like a bird").

Now my son cannot even bear to part with this book at night, so it (along with a few others) goes into the crib with him. The binding is loosening and a few pages are torn, but I'll gladly spend another .99 to replace it, if necessary. It's a small price to pay for what may become a real love and appreciation for poetry.



Eric Carle's Animals Animals Feature


  • ISBN13: 9780399217449
  • Condition: New
  • Notes: BUY WITH CONFIDENCE, Over one million books sold! 98% Positive feedback. Compare our books, prices and service to the competition. 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed



Eric Carle's Animals Animals Overview


In his distinctive, vibrantly colored collage style, Carle has created stunning illustrations to accompany more than 50 poems from such sources as the Bible, William Shakespeare, Pawnee Indian verse, and Ogden Nash. "Joyous. A book to be shared."--Booklist. Full-color illustrations.


Eric Carle's Animals Animals Specifications


Eric Carle's distinctive art holds a place of honor in the world of children's books. (He is the creator of The Very Hungry Caterpillar and the illustrator of Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What Do You See?.) In this thoughtfully selected collection of poems about animals, you'll meet creatures of every sort, from an ant to a yak. You'll find selections from many cultures, penned by celebrated poets such as Lewis Carroll, Ogden Nash, Rudyard Kipling, Emily Dickinson, and Jack Prelutsky. Animals, Animals is best suited for older preschoolers and children in the early elementary grades, but the beautiful illustrations will please children of any age, including babies. The oversized format lends itself well to Eric Carle's bright collages--the animals, birds, and insects seem ready to jump or fly right off the pages. (Ages 1 to 8)

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Not what I expected - Kylee's Mom - DE
My daughter loves Eric Carles' The Hungry Caterpillar and The Grouchy Ladybug; to give my husband and I a break at bedtime reading, I bought this book. The poems are not children's poems as I assumed, so this does not hold my 2 1/2 yr old's attention. It'll be great when she's older; definitely recommend for older children, just disappointed that we're back to the Hungry Caterpillar and Grouchy Ladybug until I get another one.



Large and wonderful - A. Maykuth - alaska
About the size of a magazine, yet heavier paper. Filled with the wonderful photos of animals and poems and haikus of all sorts. I read random passages out of the book to my 6 month old. He loves to touch the pictures and hear me read as well!



Justin in San Antonio, 11 yrs - -
I thought the book was okay, but it might be more suitable for small kids. Some of the poems had made up words that were kind of like Dr. Suess type words. That's why I think little kids would like it better.

I did like Eric Carle's art in the book, and every poem had a picture with it that was colorful. I think it would be a good book for my little cousins because it was about animals and most of the poems were short so they won't get bored.




*** Product Information and Prices Stored: Sep 15, 2010 05:00:10

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Great Price for

BUILDING A HOUSE Review



Byron Barton's deceptively simple cartoon-like drawings and streamlined text may seem unimpressive at first glance. But this author has a distinctive gift for distilling essential components of any event or theme into a page-turningly smooth story that the youngest child can follow. In this volume, he describes and illustrates the step-by-step construction of a family home, beginning with "a green hill" with land surveyors pictured, and ending with a family moving into the home. It's an excellent early lesson in architecture for any child, but particularly those young children who show an interest in how objects in their environment work.





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Customer Reviews





A great way to build a house - R. J. Thomas -
We are currently building a house so this book has been the perfect companion to this process. My little boy (two and a half) is able to make connections to the pictures in the book to what is going on in 'real life' with his house. If you are building a house and have a small child, I highly recommend this book.



How to build a house - Grandma - USA
A very nice book for toddlers to see how houses are made. Our grandson loves machinery and how things are made. Nice art work.



Excellent book for preschool and toddlers - M. Kaminski - Dallas, TX
When I saw this book only had an average of 3.5 stars, I had to write my own review. My two boys LOVE this book. One is 5 years old, with mild autism, and the other is a highly gifted [...]. The text IS simple, and short, but the pictures allow for plenty of exploration and explanation. We talked about all the different people involved in building a house, the family moving in when it was complete, etc.... In my mind, this is an excellent book for sharing. Parents can expand on the simple text as they see appropriate.

*** Product Information and Prices Stored: Sep 14, 2010 19:45:08

Saturday, September 11, 2010

Check Out Pooh Library original 4-volume set (Pooh Original Edition) for $27.34

Pooh Library original 4-volume set (Pooh Original Edition) Review



This is the same collection, right down to the green case, that I bought for my son some 30 plus years ago, when he "was very young". For anyone who read these books to their children, and for any of the "grown up children" that still remember them, these wonderful stories of childhood in a more innocent time are very special. I don't think it matters if "we are six" or if "we are sixty", this is literature that ANYone can read at any age and still enjoy. What a beautiful escape from the stresses of our every day grown-up world!I intend to purchase this set again for my own library, of which there are many other "childrens'" books that I still love to open and read.



Pooh Library original 4-volume set (Pooh Original Edition) Feature


  • ISBN13: 9780525444510
  • Condition: New
  • Notes: BUY WITH CONFIDENCE, Over one million books sold! 98% Positive feedback. Compare our books, prices and service to the competition. 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed



Pooh Library original 4-volume set (Pooh Original Edition) Overview


Stop everything! If at least one copy of each of these classics is not in a prominent place on your bookshelf, your home and your progeny's childhood is incomplete. Winnie-the-Pooh and his friends--blustery old Owl, bouncy Tigger, clever Christopher Robin, glum Eeyore, and the rest--have been a staple of children's literature for over 70 years in A.A. Milne's Winnie-the-Pooh and The House at Pooh Corner. And Milne's immortal collections of children's verse, When We Were Very Young and Now We Are Six, have soothed many a savage beast at bedtime with such incomparable delights as "If I Were King" and "Us Two." All four of these classics, complete with Ernest H. Shepard's original illustrations, are gathered here in a handsome boxed set. These hardcover editions will most certainly be a cherished legacy to be handed down for generations to come. After all, as Rabbit says solemnly one day, "Without Pooh, the adventure would be impossible." (Ages 3 to 103) --Emilie Coulter


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At last, no Disney here! - RoundHouseJim -
The "original" books by A.A. Milne, here presented, are not as "thick" as the ones I remember from my pre-school years, but maybe that's just me. The contents are, to the best of my memory, accurate, and happily, free of the "Disnification" imposed on the stories in recent years. In general, a worthwhile addition to the libraries of the "very young."



Pooh still delights, after all these years! - timetraveler -
This original set of A.A. Milne's classic Pooh series was the perfect addition to the library we are building for our grandchildren. The simple pen and ink drawings belie the magic that leaps from every page. If your kids relationship with Pooh is best described by the commercial Disney experience, you owe it to them, and yourself, to explore the original writings! Beautiful, captivating and heart-warming, this set is the quintessential addition to your library, as well.



The best of Pooh - Erica Burr - Fort Collins, Colorado
I bought these for my 3 year old daughter. She loves listening to the stories. We read them over and over without ever tiring of them. Great to read the originals and not the Disney version.

*** Product Information and Prices Stored: Sep 11, 2010 18:15:06

Friday, September 10, 2010

Great Price for $101.53

BB Anth: Hattie&the Fox Bk1 Gr1/3 Review



I first discovered this book over 10 years ago when I was studying to become a teacher. Whilst on practical teaching placement, the Preschool teacher I was studying with introduced this book as her book of the week. The children were enthralled by the story, the sense of impending danger as the fox begins to emerge, the repetitious remarks that the animals make and the beautiful water coloured illustrations, all add up to a classic story for young children.
This story is so simple that children memorize it within a couple of tellings. You will find that you no longer needed to read the story yourself, the children will do it for you.




BB Anth: Hattie&the Fox Bk1 Gr1/3 Overview


Hattie the Hen spots danger -- but the goose and the pig and the sheep and the horse and the cow don't seem to care!

Young children will enjoy happy shivers of anticipation as this cumulative tale builds, and they'll be delighted by the final surprise, when everyone sees that what Hattie has been saying is true!


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Another Mem Fox Gem! - erinsan -
My son got this for his 2nd birthday and enjoys hearing me read it a lot. He loves to yell out "MOO!" at the end. The illustrations don't interest him so much, but that's fine. He still enjoys the story. We've not found a Mem Fox book yet that we don't love!



A little gem for the under five set - Lindag -
This charming story, with its repetitive refrain, is a perfect read-aloud. Add to that bright, cheery illustrations, and a surprise ending, and you have a sure winner.



Great story, good art work! - Mary Ann Craven - Fallbrook, CA USA
I absolutely love this book. I lost my first copy so replaced it. It is a story that can be read over and over again. It can even be acted out with puppets in the classroom because it is similar to The Little Red Hen, in that the kids can remember their lines very easily. The artwork is wonderful...a paper collage with ink details. Check the faces out at the end. Tooooo cute! I consider it a classic.



Fun to read with great pictures - Amanda Hamm - NC
Hattie is a favorite at our house. My two-year-old niece wants to hear it when she comes over as well. The repetition in this book works so well because of the natural rhythm it creates. That rhythm will please toddlers and preschoolers will love pointing out the approaching fox. You'll be reading this for years.

By the way, my son loves this book so much he named our Little People hen Hattie.

*** Product Information and Prices Stored: Sep 10, 2010 06:32:04

Thursday, September 9, 2010

Check Out Album of horses

Album of horses Review



Okay, if you are looking for a book that just has facts, no history about the breed, nothing interesting to it then don't get this book. If you are looking for some breed history and a fun read with that classic touch of Marguerite Henery then this is great. I still love reading it over and over. Henery doesn't write boring books about facts, she writes stories about horses, I have no idea why people expect this to be any different. If you want a book strictly about facts then I recommend Horses by Smithsonian Handbooks, if you want stories about breeds and history get this one.




Album of horses Overview


How did the Morgan horse get its name?

What are the differences between a Belgian and a Clydesdale?

Why are the Byerly Turk, Darley Arabian, and Godolphin Arabian so important?

Find the answers to these and many other intriguing questions in Marguerite Henry's Album of Horses. The award-winning author of the wonderful stories Misty of Chincoteague, King of the Wind, and Brighty of the Grand Canyon, Marguerite Henry describes in vivid detail the hardworking Shire, the elegant Lipizzan, the spirited Mustang, and many more. Never before have facts about horses been more accessible, and with Wesley Dennis's classic illustrations highlighting every page, this unique collection is sure to be treasured by horse lovers of all ages.


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Blast of Horstalgia - Library Gaga - North Carolina
I was astonished to see this book for sale at a trendy hardware store in Black Mountain, NC this weekend. My sister, who was always a horse freak, is getting it for her 57th birthday. She will remember it from childhood. After purchasing I couldn't wait to open it and relive memories. The illustrations came bounding back in all their joy. Reading the text (admittedly for the first time) I actually teared up. This is such a wholesome generously spirited throwback -- you'll love it if you hanker for a simpler time of love and admiration for one of God's most beautiful creatures.



Detailed text and beautiful illustrations - Jessica M. Burkhart - NYC
I picked up ALBUM OF HORSES at a school book fair in the fifth grade and have since read this book numerous times. There is detailed information about breeds and the history of horses. The illustrations are gorgeous and this is a great book to add to any horse fan's collection.






Album of Horses by Marguerite Henry - Kathleen M. Allen - Delaware
I had owned this book when I was a kid. I loved it because it gave you so much information about the different breeds of horses and the pictures were wonderful for me to look at back then. I bought this book because I don't know what happened to the original and it made me sad. Out of nostalgia for the past experience I had when I had the book as a kid, as an adult, I wanted the book back. I was so thankful that it was possible to even get a copy because I know it is an older book. Even though the reading is not geared for an adult I still find the book heart-warming to own.

*** Product Information and Prices Stored: Sep 09, 2010 22:38:05

Check Out " Eragon " and " Eldest "

" Eragon " and " Eldest " Review



I am 71. I read these books when they first came out, then gave them to my 35 year-old grand daughter. As I was so impressed with the books, I purchased them again to put in my free informal home library for the neighborhood children. All ages will enjoy them. They spark the imagination with magic, adventure and fantasy. I had problems putting them down. You won't be disappointed.





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Awesome 5* - Jason -
Very nice book set. I loved how it came within 2 days, and now, I am currently reading the first. Great value and great quality book.



Good book! - MAJK Organization, Inc. - Tyler, TX USA
This is a really good story, with great descriptions and good character development. Keeps you involved throughout the long books. I didn't want it to end!



Eragon/Eldest 1 and two - Sheryl J. Alldredge -
Wanted the rest of the series but missing book
4....will they ever make book 4 to finish the
book series...?I now have 1-3..thank you Amazon




*** Product Information and Prices Stored: Sep 09, 2010 17:07:04

Check Out Taran Wanderer (The Chronicles of Prydain)

Taran Wanderer (The Chronicles of Prydain) Review



Of the five splendid books in the Prydain Chronicles by Lloyd Alexander, my favorite is the fourth, TARAN WANDERER.

The previous three books: THE BOOK OF THREE, THE BLACK CAULDRON and THE CASTLE OF LLYR are superb fantasy for children. They share a common theme that nothing comes without work or sacrifice and show that glory is less fine than friendship. The final book, THE HIGH KING, picks up this theme again as the struggle between good and evil is played out to the end.

Just as its title is different TARAN WANDERER is different. Here our young hero, the orphan boy Taran, is growing from a boy to a man. Suddenly he is aware of the gap in rank between himself and his childhood friend Princess Eilonwy; suddenly he knows he loves her but can never marry her unless he has land or rank to offer in turn. So he leaves the only home he has known, the farm of the enchanter Dallben and sets out on a quest to discover the truth of his origins. Was he high-born or low?

This book is different. Always before when Taran set out with his friends to find some magical item, he would find the unexpected. While some chapters might be grim the quest was always lighthearted and the comrades always entertaining. Here Taran sets out not knowing what he is looking for and he finds the commonplace. The challenge that Taran faces is one that most adults are familiar with: one can search for Truth, but it is not always to be found. Disappointment is part of life and must be faced. Taran's search takes him from the magical marshes of Morva to the rude hut of a shepherd, from evil sorcerer's stronghold to the campfires of a bandit gang. He searches the length and breadth of Prydain and does not find his parents. He does discover the common people of Prydain, how they live and work and love and comes to the realization that nobility is not necessarily found in marble halls.

I have loved this book since I first read it more than forty years ago; I love it still. Great fantasy for all ages and all times. A real classic, as are all the books of Prydain. If you have not yet visited this magical kingdom loosely based on Welsh mythology, you have missed a real treat.





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Taran Wanderer - Jasmyn A. Dieck - USA
Taran has finally admitted his feeling for the Princess Eilonwy. The problem now is that he doesn't believe that his bloodlines are worthy of her. She is a princess after all, and he is but a lowly assistant pig keeper, a orphan that does not know where he really came from. So he sets of with the ever faithful Gurgi as his companion in a quest to find out who he is.

We are visited by several old friends from previous books in the series and introduced to a handful of new bad guys. I have to say the bad guys are getting better - or more badder? - as the series progresses and more and more inventive plans are needed to foil their plots.

Taran learns much about himself through his journey and learns some very important lessons along the way, with one of the most important being about who he really is. I loved the sorcerer, Morda. It seems all of man's faults are wrapped up quite nicely in one little package. Fflewddur returns with Llyan, such a wonderful friend that manages to save the day at least once. Kaw, the pesky crow shows us that help comes from the least likely places. And of course the faithful Gurgi, the best friend Taran could ever have is along for the ride.

I think this will have to be my favorite so far in the series. With just one more left, The High King, I can't wait to see how everything ends.

4/5



Lloyd Alexander at his best - -
In my opinion, this was the best book in the series by far. I liked how there were kind of different parts to the book - first starting with the three "hags", then moving on to Doli and his problem, and so on. It was almost like a storybook with different stories in it. I especially liked the part where he was staying at that guy's house.( I forget his name. It was Llonio, I beleive.) This book does not have a lot of action, but I like it because it gives us a chance to get to know Taran better.






best of the series - Book Yan -
This one stands apart from the other books in the series, as it has far less action and far more character development.

I read it something like 12 years ago and still remember most of the plot!

*** Product Information and Prices Stored: Sep 09, 2010 12:50:05

Check Out MISS RUMPHIUS

MISS RUMPHIUS Review



THIS BOOK WAS RECOMMENDED TO ME WHILE I WAS VACATIONING IN MAINE. I FELL IN LOVE WITH THE BEAUTIFUL LUPINES GROWING WILD EVERYWHERE. I THOUGHT IT WAS A GREAT WAY TO SHARE THIS EXPERIENCE WITH MY GRANDCHILDREN SOME DAY. I LOVED THE BOOK AS AN ADULT AS WELL.





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Miss Rumphius - Susie -
This is a wonderful book for ages 7-10. It is fun to read and has meaning behind the story.






Lupines are pretty if you don't mind spreading invasive species - Readasaurus - Pittsburgh, PA United States
I believe Lupines are an invasive species, are they not? So while the flowers may look pretty, Miss Rumphius is really not doing the world any favors by scattering seeds for plants that will outcompete other "pretty flowers" that are native to the region. This may not have been known or understood at the time the book was written. While it's hard to disagree with the general sentiment of the book, it fall short of presenting a good example of how to leave the world better than you found it. Don't mean to be snarky, but between this and the wooden Indian issue mentioned by another reviewer, this book's message seems to be overshadowed by its misguided examples. Maybe in a few more decades the story will be so obviously outdated as to be quaint, as is the case with many much-loved classics in which we recognize but allow ourselves to overlook their flaws.



gorgeous - LibKat - Cape Cod, MA
This book is a classic for a very good reason. The story is powerful and moving and the illustrations are gorgeous. I always think of this book when I go up to Bar Harbor every summer for vacation. As a child it made me want to sow lupines everywhere.

*** Product Information and Prices Stored: Sep 09, 2010 06:10:03

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Great Price for

Never Cry Wolf Review



I watched the movie some time in the 90s. I loved it. I was unaware that the author of the book has nearly cult status in Canada. An amazon friend (or more than 1?) told me that I ought to read Farley Mowat ... so here I am, choosing his one book that means something to me immediately. I find that the book must have been among the front-running myth busters on wolves. Myth busting is always entertaining. I don't know enough about the subject matter to judge the full extent of truth in the matter, but as I like Mowat's attitude and writing, I give him the benefit of doubt (though I was a little disconcerted by the following line in his foreword of 1993: Never allow facts to interfere with the truth! That is of course a nicely absurd sentence and therefore fun, but is also a little precarious.)

What is this? It is several things: first of all a non-fiction account of a research expedition into the wild and cold. (Or is it an inaccurate account of a biased partisan trip to damage the natural interests of the hunting industry?) It is also a shrill satire about hunters, their lobby, bureaucrats, and `scientists'. All this is funny and it is nice to see how Mowat stretches his humor to himself. (Example: he was sunbathing naked in the wilderness, when a small group of wolves passes nearby; he has no time to collect his clothes and runs after them naked, for his scientific observations; he meets a group of local people (then still called Eskimos) and after the encounter a man says to him that the woman in the group might have liked him better with his trousers on.)

The book was published in the 60s but based on events in the 40s. A young zoologist is sent to the wilderness to prove that wolves are bad and require eradication. They are competing with the large game industry, who does not like competition. The ruling theory about wolves is that they are voraciously bloodthirsty and kill for the fun. Our hero is expected to measure the problem and propose solutions.
He writes in his 1993 foreword that he sees himself as one of the fathers of the theory that the wolf has been demonized unfairly, that he is not remotely the danger to Homo sapiens and other species that mythology claimed him to be. The demonization of the wolf, says Mowat, was started when man became sedentary. Wolf became the embodiment of evil to civilized man.
Mowat's idyllic stories about good family life and neighborhood, plus his descriptions of wolves hunting deer reads as if it makes sense. His main theory is that wolves don't diminish deer herds, but keep them healthy. Convincing.
This is all old history and probably the real world has moved on to doing irreparable damage by now. Or not?




Never Cry Wolf Overview


More than a half-century ago the Canadian Wildlife Service assigned the naturalist Farley Mowat to investigate why wolves were killing arctic caribou. Mowat's account of the summer he lived in the frozen tundra alone-studying the wolf population and developing a deep affection for the wolves (who were of no threat to caribou or man) and for a friendly Inuit tribe known as the Ihalmiut ("People of the Deer")-is a work that has become cherished by generations of readers, an indelible record of the myths and magic of wild wolves.


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Great Seller! - Lori -
This book was for my daughter, who is an environmental activist/eco warrior. She LOVES the book - it arrived on time, was new and we had no problems with this order. Thank you.



Great Purchase! - Jasmine -
Received my book promptly with no problems and the used book was in great condition.



Science can be funny too. - Danielle E. Mitchell -
Farley Mowat does a wonderful job of injecting a comedic aspect into his writing of his time spent studying wolves in the arctic. With two chapters left to read, I've no doubt I'll fly through them - all the while with a smile on my face and a giggle escaping here or there. This book is a wonderfully simple read but still includes quite an amount of factoids which are likely new to you. I highly recommend reading this book - it won't take you more than a few days of leisurely reading. I'm considering picking up some of Mowat's other works.




*** Product Information and Prices Stored: Sep 08, 2010 19:39:07

Check Out Anansi The Spider for $1.92

Anansi The Spider Review



ANANSI THE SPIDER is a retelling of a story from the Ashanti people by Gerald McDermott. Though one doesn't realize it at the onset, the story is actually an origins tale about a very important piece of our universe. The story revolves around a father spider named Anansi and his six sons. Each of his sons has an unique gift and on a particular day each of the sons is called upon to use their gifts as their father finds himself in lots of trouble. The book has a map of Africa at the beginning that displays where the country of Ghana, the place where the Ashanti people live. The beginning also includes a prologue by the author explaining the importance of folklore, mythology, and legends and where the story comes from and what makes Anansi such a beloved character. The story is told in a type of broken English and is accompanied by some very bright and colorful, very geometric illustrations. It was a winner of the 1973 Caldecott Honor because of the very memorable illustrations.




Anansi The Spider Overview


In trying to determine which of his six sons to reward for saving his life, Anansi the Spider is responsible for placing the moon in the sky.


Anansi The Spider Specifications


Anansi the Spider is a wise, funny, mischievous, and loveable folk hero who pops up in traditional Ashanti tales from Ghana, in West Africa. This story, retold and illustrated by Gerald McDermott, relates the tale of father Anansi and his six spider sons. When Anansi sets out on a dangerous journey and gets into all sorts of trouble, each son does one thing to help, and all their efforts together save their father. He finds a mysterious, beautiful globe of light in the forest, and decides to make it a gift of thanks. But which son should receive the prize? Even with the help of Nyame, the God of All Things, he can't decide, so Nyame takes the great globe up into the sky, and that's where it has stayed ever since--the moon, for all to see. This profound story reaches children of many ages; younger ones see it as an exciting rescue story, but older children are intrigued by the larger themes of cooperation and "the whole being more than its parts."

Anansi the Spider, McDermott's first book, received immediate acclaim and was named a Caldecott Honor Book. McDermott has retold and illustrated many other folktales and myths during his long career, including Arrow to the Sun: A Pueblo Indian Tale, which received the Caldecott Medal, Musicians of the Sun, and a series of trickster folktales from around the world. He has a rare combination of skills, being both a gifted writer and a talented artist. His distinctive graphic style using bold shapes and brilliant colors is always striking, but is especially well suited to the story of Anansi, with traditional African motifs skillfully integrated throughout the art. This is a story that can be read over and over again! (Ages 4 to 9) --Marcie Bovetz

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Anansi The Spider - Steven C. Thedford - Atlanta
The story is from the Ashanti people of West Africa. Anansi is folk hero, well known to the people of Ghana, and a trickster. The story is about Anansi's six sons,- See Trouble, Second son, Thirty son, Next son, Another son, and Cushion. During the tale, Anansi gets himself into trouble- what else is new. Yet, each son uses his gifts to help save their father. The story can teach children that they all have unique talents.



A must have for pre-k! - Julia M. Heaney - Bergen County, NJ
For whatever reason, this is my students' very favorite story! They love the characters, and role play being 'road builder,' 'stone thrower' and the rest quite often! I highly recommend it for preschool teachers- great for discussions about working together.



I do not recommend this book - Kurt A. Johnson - North-Central Illinois, USA
This is the story of Kwaku Anansi, a spider, who had six sons. And one day, when Anansi disappeared, his sons used their special abilities to see him some safely. But, when the adventure is over and Anansi wants to reward his most worthy son, he must find a special solution.

This book won the 1973 Caldecott Honor, but I must say that I strongly disagree with that. The author, Gerald McDermott of Detroit, Michigan, used a rather stunted English for the story, pretty much eschewing the use of definite articles. For example, on one page he writes, "And last of sons was Cushion." Is the book suggesting that African people by their nature use a pidgin English? I must say that I found the book to be condescending and downright insulting.

As an attempt to bring African folklore to the common reader, I think that the book is wonderful. But, for its actual execution, I think that the book leaves much to be desired. I do not recommend this book.

*** Product Information and Prices Stored: Sep 08, 2010 15:31:05

Check Out Roxaboxen (Turtleback School & Library Binding Edition) for $17.20

Roxaboxen (Turtleback School & Library Binding Edition) Review



I spent last weekend in Santa Fe, which reminded me so much of the beautiful Arizona desert I grew up in. This got me thinking about one of my family's favorite picture books: Roxaboxen. Roxaboxen is a celebration of the imaginary world that children often live in, and a great reminder to adults that sometimes all a child needs is the chance to play outdoors.

Roxaboxen takes place in a desert where, at first glance, the landscape appears to be quite bare. But it is not bare to the children who live there. For them, Roxaboxen is a place that through the power of make believe, turns into a magical world. As the children outline the streets with stones, the town begins to grow and grow. There's a main street, a town hall, a bakery and two ice cream parlors. ("In Roxaboxen you can eat all the ice cream you want.") The children build houses, which start off quite plain, but take on more and more rooms as time goes on. There's a jail and a cemetery in Roxaboxen, but the only grave is that of a dead lizard.

In Roxaboxen, everybody has a car; all you need is something round for a steering wheel. But you'd better watch out, because there's a speed limit for cars and if you don't mind it, you'll end up in jail. Even better, everyone has a horse. All you need for a horse is a stick and some kind of bridle. (And there's no speed limit for people on horses!)

Barbara Cooney's illustrations lend the perfect touch to Roxaboxen. She captures the essence of the desert perfectly. In particular, I love the ocotillos with the brilliant red flowers at their tips and the colorful desert sky at sunset. It whisked me right back to my own childhood in Arizona.

You can see that Roxaboxen is a "quiet book." On the one hand, there's not a lot going on, and yet there's so much going on. I love this book because it celebrates a childhood filled with play, instead of one filled with "things." My kids all loved Roxaboxen when they were younger. I think it's a book that will inspire your kids to go outside and create an imaginary world in your backyard.




Roxaboxen (Turtleback School & Library Binding Edition) Overview


FOR USE IN SCHOOLS AND LIBRARIES ONLY. A hill covered with rocks and wooden boxes becomes an imaginary town for Marian, her sisters, and their friends.


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Childhood memories - candy - Texas
This was my FAVORITE book as a child. I am 25 now and it is still one of my favorites. I used to read it over and over and wish I was there with those kids, in the desert with the sparkling glass. Today, I spend most of my vacation time out in the desert and I think this book really helped shape my love for it.

Very cute story and even inspirational without being sappy.Very relatable, too.

Illustrations are really pretty and sweet.



Beautiful :) - Ulyyf - NYC
This is a pretty nostalgic book about the author's mother's childhood. She and her friends made the land behind their houses into their own play area, and spent time there, year after year, making cities and fighting "wars" and eating "ice cream".

Reading this book is really like diving right into somebody else's make-believe world. My nieces love it, but they don't get to read it too often, as it does make me cry :) Definitely check this one out.






Super Story! - Mary Jones - Stockbridge, MA USA
I love this story! And so do all the elementary school children I have read it to over the years! Roxaboxen is a town that children created during the summer months--complete with homes, stores, and a town hall. Their adventures are exciting and right-on-target for young children. A pure delight!

Mary Jones, Elementary School Librarian of 17 years

*** Product Information and Prices Stored: Sep 08, 2010 11:08:05

Great Price for

HOW DO DINOSAURS EAT THEIR FOOD? Review



We have 3 or 4 of the How Do Dinosaurs books and my son loves them! He's only three and we've been reading them since he was about 9 months old. Back then he loved looking at the pictures of the dinosaurs. Now he can quote all the stories, we read them almost nightly. They are adorable books and I recommend them to anyone who has small children. My son loves them so much that we ended up tracing some of the pictures and putting them on his walls! He calls this book How Do Dinosaurs Eat Lunch . . .





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love love love this book! - Vin's Mom - Pine Brook, NJ
i love so many things about this book. it is fast to read... and tells a great lesson... as do all of the "how do Dinosaur " books do... perfect examples of what not to do... love love love this book!






Great Series - G. Little - Taylorsville, NC
My little girl is 23 months. She loves all the books in this series. Her favorites are How...Eat Food, and How..Say Goodnight. She has to hear them both at least 3 times daily.



One of my favorites in the Dinosaur series! - Kim - USA
This was the very first "how do dinosaurs" books that I bought my daughter, then 2 1/2 she loved the pictures and the way it rhymed...3 years later I am still reading this to her at least once a week. It is my very favorite one in the collection that we have, and one of her top favs too. Highly recommend!

*** Product Information and Prices Stored: Sep 08, 2010 06:47:08

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Great Price for

The Scarecrow of Oz Review



This book brings in some nice characters--Trot and Cap'n Bill, from the two non-Oz books Baum wrote between EMERALD CITY and PATCHWORK GIRL, the better of which is the fabulous SKY ISLAND which every Baum fan should read. And a wonderful, funny, petulant but endearing non-human creature (the Ork, who is nothing at all like JRR Tolkein's Orcs.) The Ork gets some hilarious lines, like "If I'm going to starve, I'll do it all at once, not by degrees!" He's a little like the Woggle-Bug but more distinct and more appealing.

Plotwise this book is more or less nowhere; it's beginning is exceptionally grim (the protagonists face the apparent prospect of dying of thirst); then it becomes a walking and flying tour, with an attempt to cram an implausible story about one-dimensional characters (and the Scarecrow) in at the end. The story sort of threatens to become interesting when Cap'n Bill gets turned into a grasshopper--something which has happened to only one other Oz character--but doesn't quite work; it's too late in the book. Baum should have shortened the journey to Jinxland and focused on what happened there, or put more plot into the journey itself, like in WIZARD, PATCHWORK GIRL, and TIKTOK.

In spite of the plot problems I give it four stars for vivid portrayal of the main characters and Baum's special on-the-road atmosphere. If you like Trot and Cap'n Bill be sure to read SKY ISLAND.




The Scarecrow of Oz Overview


Journey back to the magical land that lies somewhere over the rainbow with this ninth sequel to Baum’s timeless classic The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. Along the way you’ll be enchanted by all 96 black-and-white drawings and 12 full-color plates by John R. Neill that have been faithfully reproduced from the original 1915 edition. They bring to life the adventures of the Scarecrow who is sent by Glinda the Good to rescue Trot, her friend Cap’n Bill and Princess Gloria from the clutches of the evil witch and King Krewl. Children of all ages will read this book again and again. 12 full-color, 96 b/w illus.



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Customer Reviews


Scarecrow - Gayle -
Trot and Cap'n Bill are in trouble -- their boat has been pulled down into a giant whirlpool! When they finally land in a mysterious cave, there seems to be no escape....until they meet a strange creature. Where in the world are they?



Not one of the best in the series - ScrawnyPunk - Houston, TX USA
The Scarecrow of Oz was chiefly a way for Baum to introduce readers to another one of his book series (The Sea Fairies and Sky Island) to his more lucrative Oz readership. The story itself is a bit uneven, but is easily digested by younger readers as separate segments can be treated as stand-alone stories with a single unifying theme of moving Cap'n Bill and Trot from California to Oz.

Synopsis: Cap'n Bill and Trot (a relationship which probably would not find its way into modern kiddie lit) go for a recreational row and get caught in a whirlpool. The whirlpool transports them to a fairy land which they escape with the help of an orc (a magical flying creature, not the nasties in Tolkein) and some magical shrinking berries. They spend a little bit of time in the Land of Mo (another Oz series) before escaping once again with recurring character Button-Bright (from the Road to Oz), the help of some adventuresome birds and magical growing berries. They land in Jinxland, a semi-autonomous region within Oz, where they accidentally insert themselves into the nuptial politics of the local ruler, an elderly but wealthy courtesan, the daughter of a deposed king, and the son of another deposed king. The three characters are unable to do anything other than get into serious trouble with a local witch and are eventually bailed out by the combination of the Scarecrow's planning, a sudden re-appearance of the original orc with an army of his friends, and a bit of lucky timing. After restoring the king's daughter to her rightful throne and true love, they make their way back to the Emerald City where they meet everyone. The story abruptly ends at this point - the reader can assume Capn' Bill and Trot have found a home in Oz although the story's beginning did not make it seem as if Trot's family was either lost or worth leaving.






Buyer's review of The Scarecrow of Oz - Caesar -
The book arrived promptly via standard shipping. The dust cover and the book were in excellent condition. I am very pleased with the book and Amazon's service.

*** Product Information and Prices Stored: Sep 07, 2010 22:02:04

Check Out The BFG for $4.60

The BFG Review



On the face of it, "The BFG" seems just plain wrong as a children's book. Its story revolves around giants who steal children out of their beds in the night and eat them. Oh, that's just PERFECT for a bedtime story!

And as a parent, do you really want a book in which the title character delights in flatulence?

Indeed, the scary parts of the story may have led to my 7-year-old son having some nightmares. But both he and sister still loved the book! And as for the flatulence - "whizzpopping," in the giant's parlance -- of course, my kids thought that was FUNNY!

"The BFG" is the story of a Big Friendly Giant ("The BFG") and a little girl named Sophie. The BFG introduces Sophie to the strange world of giants, and together they set out to stop the nine child-eating giants.

The book has a little too much talk - and too little action - in the first half. But still there's something charming about the relationship between the BFG and Sophie. And, as a read-aloud book, it was delightful to read the giant's peculiar vocabulary. Human beings are "human beans," dreams are "bogthumpers," "grobswitchers" or "trogglehumpers," and he eats snozzcumbers while drinking frobscottle. (Run that sentence through your spell checker!)

The giant and Sophie are very likable main characters and the story takes some wondrous turns. They go to the land of dreams, for instance, and capture dreams and nightmares to put in jars. There's plenty of silliness, and then an exciting rush to a conclusion that kept us all going.

"The BFG" is the fourth Roald Dahl book I've read to my kids. Each one leaves me shaking my head - sometimes in wonderment, sometimes in puzzlement. But they've never failed to surprise!




The BFG Overview


Luckily for Sophie, the BFG is nothing like his neighbors, whose favorite pastime is guzzling little children.


The BFG Specifications


Evidently not even Roald Dahl could resist the acronym craze of the early eighties. BFG? Bellowing ferret-faced golfer? Backstabbing fairy godmother? Oh, oh ... Big Friendly Giant! This BFG doesn't seem all that F at first as he creeps down a London street, snatches little Sophie out of her bed, and bounds away with her to giant land. And he's not really all that B when compared with his evil, carnivorous brethren, who bully him for being such an oddball runt. After all, he eats only disgusting snozzcumbers, and while the other Gs are snacking on little boys and girls, he's blowing happy dreams in through their windows. What kind of way is that for a G to behave?

The BFG is one of Dahl's most lovable character creations. Whether galloping off with Sophie nestled into the soft skin of his ear to capture dreams as though they were exotic butterflies; speaking his delightful, jumbled, squib-fangled patois; or whizzpopping for the Queen, he leaves an indelible impression of bigheartedness. (Ages 9 to 12)

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Customer Reviews


Gotta love the BFG - knowmaam -
We first read the BFG 15 years ago when my oldest was small. We lost the original copy in a flood years ago. We just replaced it and reread it. It's like watching Monty Python; once you read it you never talk quite the same way again. The Big Friendly Giant does good and always puts the needs of others first. Uncommon virtues today. So watch for whizzpoppers and enjoy.



It's A Pretty Good Book - -
This review is written by my daughter:

It's a good book. I don't know Daddy, you write it. That wasn't part of the review! I'm serious Dad! Please! Just write it for me! I don't want to write this review. I don't know what to write. To everybody who is reading this review, my dad is typing it, and I want him to stop. Stop for serious, Dad. You can write it Dad. I want you to delete this review and you can start it again. I want you to delete what you just wrote because I want you to write it. Dad, I have a paper airplane with an edge and I'm going to poke your eye out if you don't delete this. With a sharp edge. With a pointy edge. Okay, Dad, I'm going to do it.



Good story but plot holes much? - Molly Moon - New Zealand
Number one: I read this when I was six, so forgive me if I get some things wrong.
Okay, so the main character is an orphan called Sophie. She can't sleep one night, so she happens to look out the window. She happens to see a giant. He happens to turn around and see her. As a result, she knows too much. She's in bed, and next thing she knows, the giant has abducted her. Lucky for her she was taken by a nice giant, who is known as "Big Friendly Giant" or BFG for short. Unlucky for her she now has to live in Giant Country, and is constantly in danger of a human-eating giant finding her.
Here we come to plot holes. First, I noticed that the BFG mentions being hungry just before Sophie finds out the truth about him. This doesn't make any sense, considering the next happenings. Second, the reason he took Sophie was to make sure she didn't tell anyone, yet at the end, the pair are living happily in London, and everyone knows. Third, if everyone knows, what exactly happened with the orphanage? Did anyone even notice Sophie was gone?
However, none of these hindered my enjoyment of the book, and most kids of six wouldn't notice-I only noticed these as a teenager!-so I recommend the book. I loved all the Roald Dahl chapter books when I was five, "The Witches" being the first chapter book I read by myself, and I recommend them all.




*** Product Information and Prices Stored: Sep 07, 2010 13:46:05