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| 21. Your Favorite Seuss : A Baker's Dozen by the One and Only Dr. Seuss by DR SEUSS | |
![]() | list price: $34.95
our price: $23.07 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0375810617 Catlog: Book (2004-10-12) Publisher: Random House Books for Young Readers Sales Rank: 615 US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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Book Description Theodor Geisel (a.k.a. Dr. Seuss) was born March 2, 1904, and died September 25, 1991. With introductory essays to each story by: Barbara Bader, Author and Critic Stan and Jan Berenstain, Creators of The Berenstain Bears Audrey Geisel, Widow of Dr. Seuss Peter Glassman, Childrens Bookseller Starr LaTronica, Childrens Librarian John Lithgow, Actor and Childrens Book Author Barbara Mason, Kindergarten Teacher Richard H. Minear, Author of Dr. Seuss Goes to War Christopher Paolini, Author of Eragon Charles D. Cohen, Author of The Seuss, the Whole Seuss, and Nothing but the Seuss Pete Seeger, Folksinger Christopher Cerf, TV Writer, Composer, and Producer Lane Smith, Childrens Book Illustator | |
| 22. Where the Wild Things Are | |
![]() | list price: $16.95
our price: $11.86 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0060254920 Catlog: Book (1988-11-09) Publisher: HarperCollins Sales Rank: 65 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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Book Description In the forty years since Max first cried "Let the wild rumpus start," Maurice Sendak's classic picture book has become one of the most highly acclaimed and best-loved children's books of all time. Now, in celebration of this special anniversary, introduce a new generation to Max's imaginative journey to where the wild things are. Reviews (195)
This book is beautifully illustrated, the story flows rapidly and flawlessly, and the language is simultaneously simple and loaded with meaning. While it is unlikely to happen, watch out for your children trying to write like Sendak, with his trademark run-on sentences. This is the first book I remember reading by myself. It holds a special place in my heart. Wow! I think that any child can sympathize with Max as he just wants to do what he wants to do, and then gets in trouble for breaking the rules. We also can understand how his frustration and anger cannot be sustained in the face of parental clarity, consistency, and calm strength. He works through his anger during his "journey" through the "jungle" and tames himself as he tames the monsters. Along the way, he discovers how lonely he is and how much he dislikes disapproval. The ending is simple, happy, and realistic. This is a great book to read with your children, and then turn over to them to read on their own. It opens the door to discuss many simple but crucial issues of childhood. Please buy this book and use it.
When I was little, I'd stare at the page long after my mother finished reading it to me. Sendak seemed to have found my creative pulse, as he drew me in to wonder about his world of pretend monsters. The monsters are not quite so terrible, and could be considered friendly. Max and I are both boys, and it must ordinary for we boys to get in a terrific amount of trouble in the process of playing. I related to Max. He sounded like a real boy. I was never quite sure what a rumpus was, but I knew it sounded like a lot of fun. The pictures are cool. There is a rich, full-of-flavor tension in the art. The expressions and poses of the characters come across as genuine. Don't be fooled by the amazing pictures. You'll enjoy the carefully laid story just as much, and your child can close his eyes and imagine his own version. A wonderful book. A classic. If you've got kids, or if you read to your family's or neighbor's kids, this is one book which will be dog-eared from numerous reads. I fully recommend "Where the Wild Things Are" by Maurice Sendak. Anthony Trendl
My dad reelly likes this book because he said it was good when he was a kid. I dont like it. The pictures are boring and the story is not long. My dad reads this to me a lot and I like the books that are newer. New books have pictures that are pretty and the storys are funner and longer. This book has pictures that look old. I wish my dad would read this to himself and let me read something diferent. Nichole
I am twenty-four years old now. I love this book as much as I did the first time I read it. This book speaks to places in the heart and the mind that you sort of forget about as you age. It's a magical book, it never fails to transform me. Long live King Max....and all of his beautiful monsters.
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| 23. Amazing You: Getting Smart About Your Private Parts by GailSaltz | |
![]() | list price: $15.99
our price: $10.87 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0525473890 Catlog: Book (2005-05-05) Publisher: Dutton Juvenile Sales Rank: 1101 US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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Book Description | |
| 24. Everyone Poops (My Body Science) by Taro Gomi, Amanda Mayer Stinchecum | |
![]() | list price: $12.95
our price: $9.71 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0916291456 Catlog: Book (1993-03-01) Publisher: Kane/Miller Book Publishers Sales Rank: 640 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
Reviews (82)
I imagine that some prudish parents will be put off by Gomi's explicit (but charming) pictures of animals and humans taking "poops" of all shapes, sizes, and colors. But Gomi's basic message is sound: relieving one's bowels is a normal part of our everyday lives. In a world where too many people are too embarrassed to ask their doctor about colorectal cancer and other "poop"-related health problems, Taro Gomi's book is especially valuable. If the child (or parent) who enjoys this book feels less squeamish about discussing colorectal health concerns at a later time, than Gomi will have done more than just entertain; the author may have also helped save a life. So buy "Everyone Poops" and share it with the ones you love.
So, for her second birthday, my friend got her this book and she loves it. She makes me read it over and over. It's a favorite bedtime story and she really gets a kick out of it. When the book shows a snake and asks "Which end is the snake's behind?" She says "This!" and points. When the book asks "What does whale poop look like?" she answers "Stinky!" I am less intrigued by this book and find the pictures somewhat freaky, but since I'm not the target audience anyway, who cares? If you're trying to teach your children not to be embarrassed or ashamed of bodily functions, it's a great book. The "everyone poops" message is definitely communicated and my daughter seems to get some satisfaction knowing that she is just like everyone else.
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| 25. Who Moved My Cheese? For Kids by Spencer Johnson | |
![]() | list price: $19.99
our price: $13.59 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0399240160 Catlog: Book (2003-05-01) Publisher: Putnam Publishing Group Sales Rank: 14439 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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Amazon.com Critics of Johnson's best-selling Who Moved my Cheese? for grownups complained about its oversimplification and lack of substance (and the fact that glad-handed managers sometimes gave the book to employees fearing for their jobs didn't help). But in a kids' book, that simplicity doesn't grate as much, and Johnson's cartoonish characters--sneaker-wearing mice Sniff and Scurry, and the tentative Hem and Haw, ever in search of "cheese" in the "maze"--look right at home alongside the rest of Steve Pileggi's crude illustrations. Of course, Johnson's homily might seem even less applicable to kids than it is to adults, and some of Haw's "Handwriting on the Wall" (again, lifted directly from the grownup version) will likely prove too abstract (like "Smell the cheese often so you know when it's getting old"). But then again, kids face more changes than most adults, and they often have fewer tools to deal with them. If nothing else, Johnson's message on "How to deal with change--and win!" is at least a slight improvement on the more time-honored "Shut up and deal." (Ages 9 to 12) --Paul Hughes Reviews (3)
It is a simple parable that illustrates the natural tendency to resist change. The uncertainty that generally accompanies change provides a level of discomfort that some try to escape. Rather than take the necessary steps for change, some people cling to old notions and actions that produce little or no results. These are good concepts to learn at an early age, as long as it is undertood that reducing such a simple little concept into practice is the hard part. Knowing that we need to "search around the maze for new cheese" doesn't help much, without guidelines for determining when we are "moving around the maze" or simply "sitting at the cheese station." Hopefully, parents can provide some insight where the book doesn't.
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| 26. Zoom (Picture Puffin) by Istvan Banyai | |
![]() | list price: $7.99
our price: $6.99 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0140557741 Catlog: Book (1998-07-01) Publisher: Puffin Books Sales Rank: 5728 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
Reviews (8)
P.S. I'm 13 and I loved it so take away that 6-8 age limit because your losing ALOT of customers! ... Read more | |
| 27. Harold and the Purple Crayon 50th Anniversary Edition (Purple Crayon Books) | |
![]() | list price: $5.99
our price: $5.39 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0064430227 Catlog: Book (1981-05-20) Publisher: HarperTrophy Sales Rank: 342 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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Book Description One evening Harold decided to go for a walk in the moonlight. But there wasn't any moon, and Harold needed a moon for a walk in the moonlight. Fortunately, he had brought his purple crayon. So he drew a moon. He also needed something to walk on. So he drew a path... And thus begins one of the most imaginative and enchanting adventures in all of children's books. The creative concept behind this beloved story has intrigued children and kept them absorbed for generations, as page by page unfolds the dramatic and clever adventures of Harold and his purple crayon. Reviews (73)
The central idea is that a child, no matter how small, can exert control over the world, and when that child makes mistakes -- drawing a choppy sea, for instance -- those mistakes can be remedied. This book gives a child power. Grown-ups don't count; Harold makes what he needs without help. Under the influence of this book, at the ripe age of 11, I created a club called "The Purple X", in which, using purple markers to send letters, I set out to right all wrongs. Harold goes one better; he makes light and land. And the book makes children who feel empowered to tackle the problems of a big, scary world.
Tiny wide-eyed Harold, in his one piece jammies and purple crayon in hand, wanders through the night using the dark canvas of sky to draw whatever fanciful dreamscapes his curious young mind can conjure. No dummy is our Harold. He is an inventive little fellow who devises his own path, invents his own moon to light his way, makes a boat when he finds himself enveloped in a purple sea, creates pies when he is hungry, and so on until he is tired. Thanks to cleverly leaving behind special images as pointers to guide his way, he makes it back home in one piece and with lots of exciting stories to tell. This is such a delightful book for children and one of the reasons is that it can be used interactively. Read the story with your kids then give them some crayons and a huge sheet of paper and let them loose to design and explore their own magical worlds.
There is hope....The trace, in erasure of its present presence, loops back from Harold to Johnson, engendering ample clues for resistance to our clinical gaze...But the specter of psychoanalytic eschatology haunts his every gesture. Every slippage is deferred, in its deferral, of Harold's problematized Lacan, leaving no indivisible remainder, defying the fatal strategies of his feints (forgetting Baudrillard) to attempt that final erasure of Derrida's (cottage) industry through a (re)sound(ing) metanarratalogical poetic. Outdistancing at every step all Derridean slippage, Harold's gestures in the dark problematize the infinite substitution and free play within a field of signifiers (themselves privileged signifieds of the wall/not-wall of the enclosing space/page), resisting inevitably all attempts at reconstituting envelopes of perfomative (de-)coding. With startling metaphysical elan, Harold slips the bounds of our logocentric world to inscribe traces of an essentialist foundation light-years beyond the binary opposition (re)inscribed by la differance: beyond Freud, with (in) Freud, with(out) Freud, to be about Freud, forgetting Freud. All in all, this "Harold" represents a remarkably vigorous (re)covery of Saussurean categories. This is no boy scribbling terse graffitos to a lost master narratology; this is the newly minted currency of our retinal field. ... Read more | |
| 28. The Fourteen Bears in Summer and Winter by Evelyn Scott, Virginia Parsons | |
![]() | list price: $14.95
our price: $10.17 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0375832793 Catlog: Book (2005-05-10) Publisher: Golden Books Sales Rank: 48226 US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
| 29. All the Places to Love by Patricia MacLachlan | |
![]() | list price: $16.99
our price: $11.55 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0060210982 Catlog: Book (1994-05-30) Publisher: HarperCollins Sales Rank: 13859 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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Book Description Reviews (15)
His big-brother role is defined in a delightful way which enhances his esteem and belongingness to the basic family. He becomes "protector" and "teacher" for his new sibling just as he has been protected and taught since his own birth. The beautiful paintings, which must be "read" along with the words, are masterpieces.
The words of this book are beautiful. The child describes being born and his grandmother holding him next to the window so that the first thing he would hear is the wind. He describes his grandfather crying and carving his name in the loft. He describes growing up and all the places to love and various scenes of quiet beauty in a country setting. Here's a quote: "My grandfather's barn is sweet-smelling and dark and cool: Learther harnesses hang like paintings against old wood." Lovely, no? But it all comes off sounding "coached" because the reality is that no child would say these things. An adult looking back on childhood would say these things, and that's really what Ms. MacLachlan is doing in the interpertation of this character. Obviously that works for a lot of folks. The book has gotten great reviews. It doesn't work for me. What does work for me are the absolutely stunningly beautiful pictures throughout the book. Glorious color, absolute realism...this is museam quality art in my opinion. Patricia MacLachlan is a wonderful writer for older readers. This picture book didn't hit the mark in my opinion. A few better choices of sentimental "country theme" picture books are "The Relatives Came" or "When I was Young in the Mountains" both by Cynthia Rylant.
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| 30. Paper Bag Princess (Munsch for Kids) by Robert Munsch, Michael Martchenko | |
![]() | list price: $5.95
our price: $5.36 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0920236162 Catlog: Book (1980-05-01) Publisher: Annick Press Sales Rank: 1572 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
Reviews (63)
I have bought this for all friends with new babies...girls and boys. What a gift when we grace our children with the power of confidence and imagination. ... Read more | |
| 31. Chicka Chicka Boom Boom (Aladdin Picture Books) by Jr, Bill Martin, John Archambault | |
![]() | list price: $6.99
our price: $6.29 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 068983568X Catlog: Book (2000-08-01) Publisher: Aladdin Sales Rank: 516 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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Book Description Countless children -- and their parents -- can joyfully recite the familiar words of this beloved alphabet chant. The perfect pairing of Bill Martin Jr and John Archambault's lively rhymes, and Caldecott Honor artist Lois Ehlert's bright, bold, cheerful pictures made Chicka Chicka Boom Boom an instant hit and a perennial favorite. This full-sized, quality paperback edition will bring even more fans to this endearing, enduring classic. There will always be room for Chicka Chicka Boom Boom on every child's bookshelf! Reviews (75)
The simple, rhythmic text of this book just begs to be chanted as you read it to your young child. Go ahead and lose your self-consciousness and do it: Your child will love the book and learn the alphabet to boot! The story line is simple: the lower case letters pass along the word that everyone is going to climb to the top of the coconut tree. Just after z makes it up the tree, "Uh-oh! Oh, no! Chicka chicka BOOM BOOM!" The uppercase letters come along to "hug their little dears and dust their pants." I understand this is where the board book version of this story ends, but I would highly recommend that you buy the regular version instead. In the full-length version, the lower case letters get up from the jumble with all their bumps and bruises and head home. But after the sun goes down, "a gets out of bed and this is what he said, 'Dare, Double Dare! You can't catch me! I'll beat you to the top of the coconut tree!' Chicka Chicka Boom Boom!" If you have fun with it, your young children will love to listen to it. The alphabet is printed in its entirity (upper and lower case letters) in the fly leaves of the book, and these are great to point to while singing the alphabet song or play a quick game of "What's that?" before or after reading the book. And your child will quickly start to chant the story along with you, I'm sure! I, for one, was thrilled when my two-year old started bringing it to me and saying, "Read it, Mommy! Read it, the Boom Boom!" He's learning his letters and having fun. For what more could I ask?
Verses of the letters' exploits are intermixed with chants like so; "Chicka chick boom boom! The text has a nice rhythmic quality to it. A kind of onomatopoetic elegance. And the illustrations, while not particularly stunning, fulfill their purpose excellently. It's a good read-aloud story for kids learning their alphabet, and would fit into any storytime excellently. A fun feisty book.
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| 32. Welcoming Babies by Margy Burns Knight, Anne Sibley O'Brien | |
![]() | list price: $7.95
our price: $7.16 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0884481247 Catlog: Book (1998-02-01) Publisher: Tilbury House Publishers Sales Rank: 388743 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
Reviews (1)
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| 33. Cars and Trucks and Things That Go by RICHARD SCARRY | |
![]() | list price: $14.99
our price: $10.19 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0307157857 Catlog: Book (1998-06-01) Publisher: Golden Books Sales Rank: 324 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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Amazon.com Reviews (55)
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| 34. Alice's Adventures in Wonderland: A Pop-up Adaptation by Lewis Carroll | |
![]() | list price: $25.95
our price: $15.57 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0689847432 Catlog: Book (2003-10-01) Publisher: Little Simon Sales Rank: 227 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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Book Description Alice's Adventures in Wonderland is Robert Sabuda's most amazing creation ever, featuring stunning pop-ups illustrated in John Tenniel's classic style. The text is faithful to Lewis Carroll's original story, and special effects like a Victorian peep show, multifaceted foil, and tactile elements make this a pop-up to read and admire again and again. Reviews (20)
While a great deal of the original text has been abridged, only a couple of the nonsense rhymes that made the original unabridged alice one of my childhoods read aloud favorites has been included. Overall, the pop up engineering is still stunning, to see Alice's face inside the White Rabbits home with her arms sticking out windows, and her feet out the chimney and front door, the mad hatters tea party, and of course, the very first telescopic view of her fall down the rabbit hole are not to be missed! My 3 1/2 year old sits thro 90% of the story just as long as he can enjoy the pop-ups again and again!
The book is similar in design to WIZARD OF OZ, has several eye-popping pages that literally jump out at you and contains a faithful abridgement of Lewis Carroll's classic text. The first page, featuring the forest where Alice first encounters the White Rabbit, is glorious, and Sabuda has imagined a remarkable way to give readers a look "down the rabbit hole." This one's as good as THE WIZARD OF OZ, and it's going to be a great gift for all my cousins this holiday season.
I've been collecting pop-ups for a long time, and this is the Pop-Up to End All Pop-Ups! I cannot give this book enough stars. If 5 is the highest, I give this book a 15! You will not be dissappointed!
Robert Sabuda's work is MAGICAL as you literally peer down the rabbit hole. Another page shows Alice in the house; Alice at the tea party; the Cheshire Cat; the deck of cards.... This book can be great to show young babies as it will spark their curiosity, but you have to just have them look at it and keep it out of reach as young toddlers would probably rip the art work. If you know a young boy or girl (ages 4 and up) or a young teenager or anyone who appreciates illustrative art - this is the book to buy. My mother bought this book for me plus one for her good friend and we both loved it! Robert Sabuda's "Wizard of OZ" was great....this might be even better!
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| 35. Dinosaurs the Defiinitive Pop-up: Dinosaurs the Defiinitive Pop-up by Robert Sabuda, Matthew Reinhart | |
![]() | list price: $26.99
our price: $17.81 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0763622281 Catlog: Book (2005-08-31) Publisher: Candlewick Press (MA) Sales Rank: 23043 US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
| 36. If You Give a Mouse a Cookie by Laura Joffe Numeroff | |
![]() | list price: $15.99
our price: $10.87 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0060245867 Catlog: Book (1985-06-30) Publisher: Laura Geringer Sales Rank: 1276 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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Amazon.com Reviews (76)
The art is well drawn and holds my kid's attention well. The story is whimsical and teaches about twenty objects (milk, cookie, crayon, tape, pillow, etc.) to young kids. They memorize the lines fairly quickly and the book can help with sight reading for the pre-school set. If you give this book to your child, he's probably going to want you to read it over and over again.
As we open, a small mouse treks down a hill on its own as a boy contentedly reads his comic book, munching on a bag of delicious chocolate chip cookies. After the boy offers the mouse a cookie (not knowing what such an action has wrought) the mouse asks for milk. Milk leads to a napkin. A napkin leads to a mirror (to check for a milk mustache, of course). A mirror leads to a hasty haircut. A haircut leads to sweeping up. And so on. All the while the boy gamely follows his rodent friend over, around, and through the different parts of the house, ever supplying the guest with whatsoever it may require. By the end, the house is in shambles, the boy exhausted on the floor (parents will relish this picture above all) and the mouse has just started in on a second cookie. Some books expertly place kids in the position of their parents. In the picture book, "Don't Let the Pigeon Drive the Bus", kids are allowed to finally tell someone (the someone in that instance being a naughty pigeon) no. In this book, the kids are now the patient parents, forever cleaning up and amusing the endlessly enthusiastic and hepped-up mousey. The pictures are deceptively simple, drawn with pure pen and ink. Just the same, millions of tiny details are apparent in every shot. The boy's refrigerator displays (oddly) a newspaper clipping of a car crash. The mouse's drawing of his family displays some pretty original dresses on his mother and sister. And I'll leave up to your imagination the variety of odds n' ends surrounding the depleted boy at the end of the story. Suffice to say, ladies and gentlemen, this book has it all. And it's a delightful story to boot.
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| 37. The Great Kapok Tree: A Tale of the Amazon Rain Forest by Lynne Cherry | |
![]() | list price: $7.00
our price: $6.30 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0152026142 Catlog: Book (2000-03-13) Publisher: Voyager Books Sales Rank: 69000 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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Amazon.com Unfortunately, there's always someone else who is willing to take his place, but the message of this environmental book is plain: Save the rain forest! The story itself is not overly compelling, but each personalized entreaty from the animals provides an accurate and persuasive scientific argument for preserving nature's gifts. Lynne Cherry's fertile watercolor and colored-pencil illustrations, including a map of the tropical rain forests of the world, are vivid and colorful. A fine starting point for a discussion about conservation. (Ages 4 to 8) --Emilie Coulter Reviews (19)
Ms Cherry is an author and illustrator of children's books who has a sensitivity for ecological issues. In The Great Kapok Tree she presents a jungle teaming with life. A man tires as he begins cutting the great tree down with an ax. He tires and sleeps. While he sleeps the animals come out of the rain forest to give him a lesson about the importance of the tree. Snakes, monkeys, butterflies, parrots, toucans, frogs jaguars and sloths all give him a pitch. Each tree is important in the rain forest. Lynne Cherry's illustrations are gorgeous, green and so alive. Her inspiration was the Amazon rain forest which she traveled to and sketch while researching this book. Each page impresses the reader with the lushness and beauty of the region. While it may seem that the concept of ecology is a bit sophisticated for a four year old it is important to remember that our early values shape our lives. It is my hope that the children of today will have of deep love of nature that will inspire them to take the necessary care of the earth ion their future. This book is a wonderful gift to a child. I have read it to children numerous times and they are always mesmerized by it.
I think this book is really good because it was very interesting and it was a good book. I liked the animals that were included and how they each had a reason.
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| 38. The Quiltmaker's Journey by Jeff Brumbeau | |
![]() | list price: $17.95
our price: $12.21 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0439512190 Catlog: Book (2005-04-01) Publisher: Orchard Sales Rank: 5697 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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Book Description
Reviews (1)
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| 39. The Lorax by Dr. Seuss, Theodor Seuss Geisel | |
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our price: $8.97 (price subject to change: see help) Asin: 0394823370 Catlog: Book (1971-08-12) Publisher: Random House Books for Young Readers Sales Rank: 730 Average Customer Review: US | Canada | United Kingdom | Germany | France | Japan |
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Amazon.com The now remorseful Once-ler--our faceless, bodiless narrator--tells the story himself. Long ago this enterprising villain chances upon a place filled with wondrous Truffula Trees, Swomee-Swans, Brown Bar-ba- loots, and Humming-Fishes. Bewitched by the beauty of the Truffula Tree tufts, he greedily chops them down to produce and mass-market Thneeds. ("It's a shirt. It's a sock. It's a glove. It's a hat.") As the trees swiftly disappear and the denizens leave for greener pastures, the fuzzy yellow Lorax (who speaks for the trees "for the trees have no tongues") repeatedly warns the Once-ler, but his words of wisdom are for naught. Finally the Lorax extricates himself from the scorched earth (by the seat of his own furry pants), leaving only a rock engraved "UNLESS." Thus, with his own colorful version of a compelling morality play, Dr. Seuss teaches readers not to fool with Mother Nature. But as you might expect from Seuss, all hope is not lost--the Once-ler has saved a single Truffula Tree seed! Our fate now rests in the hands of a caring child, who becomes our last chance for a clean, green future. (Ages 4 to 8) Reviews (58)
The story begins when a boy comes to the home of a peculair creature called Once-ler. The boy wants to know about something called the Lorax; "what it was", and "why it was there". After paying the Once-ler a small fee, he narrates the story for the boy. The pictures incorperated into the story are also poignant; for, as we see in the beginning, the small town in which the Once-ler lives is very grey and barren. However, as the Once-ler begins his story, the pictures become brighter, more cheerful, and colorful, as we see how the town once looked, long, long ago. There were animals, birds, green grass ... and trees! The Once-ler says, "I came to this glorious place. And I first saw the trees. The Truffula trees". Transfixed by these trees, the Once-ler cuts one down to make a "Thneed". Now, a Thneed is supposed to be a useful thing, which people can find many uses for. Shortly after the first tree is cut down, the Lorax appears. He explains that he talks on behalf of the trees, because the trees cannot talk for themselves. "They have no tongues". The Lorax is very upset at what the Once-ler has done. But the Once-ler ignores him, and continues to cut down the trees to make Thneeds, until all the trees have been cut down. This action, of cutting down the trees, building a factory to make the thneeds, and releasing waste residue into the water is greatly illustrated in the pictures, showing the cause and effect of polluting the environment. Eventually the pictures return to the grey, morbid colors we see in the beginning. The Lorax has had to make all the birds, animals and fish leave the town before they die of hunger and starvation, and before they choke to death on all the smog generated by the Once-ler's factory. As we can clearly see in "The Lorax", Dr. Seuss is making a very defined political statement about how humans have manipulated and destroyed our natural surroundings for their own personal greed. "The Lorax" was written in 1971, in the hayday of environmental activism, and one year after the first Earth Day. Still, Dr. Suess does not make this story into a gloomy one. He gives us hope. The Once-ler tosses down a seed to the boy; the one last remaining Truffula seed. With this one seed, Dr. Seuss tells us the possiblities are endless, and hope is not lost.
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