Showing posts with label animal stories. Show all posts
Showing posts with label animal stories. Show all posts

Cracker Jackson Review

Cracker Jackson
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
I read this as a class and at the end we all said "wow!"It is a great book about jackson, who is trying to help his ex-babysitter. It also has a lot of humor and auther's craft. It is a touching story with some funny moments too. I really like this book.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Cracker Jackson



Buy Now

Click here for more information about Cracker Jackson

Read More...

Skinny-Dipping at Monster Lake Review

Skinny-Dipping at Monster Lake
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
I liked the book because it's funny and has a very weird twist at the end. Kent thinks the monster is real, but turns out it's not. When he and his friends fish they see headlights (A.K.A the eyes.) When one of the smartest kids in the group finds out that there's a sub in the lake they go for help. But my favorite part is when they skinny dip in the lake and their friends call them "cottontails".

Click Here to see more reviews about: Skinny-Dipping at Monster Lake



Buy Now

Click here for more information about Skinny-Dipping at Monster Lake

Read More...

Nanuq (My Animal Family) Review

Nanuq (My Animal Family)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
These are beautiful, quality hardback books with lovely illustrations and engaging stories about different wild animals. The books alone are so well done that they could easily stand alone. But they don't! Each book comes with a documentary about the animal made just for children, and narrated by a child. Not only that, each book also includes an exclusive membership card to a fun website where the child can play games and learn more about the animal. This is perfect for today's multimedia learning environment... and a really good deal! They would make great gifts! (The titles I reviewed are Nanuq: A Baby Polar Bear's Story and Leo: A Baby Lion's Story.)

Click Here to see more reviews about: Nanuq (My Animal Family)



Buy Now

Click here for more information about Nanuq (My Animal Family)

Read More...

Ghost Boy Review

Ghost Boy
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Ghost Boy, by Iain Lawrence, is the story of an albino boy named Harold. An albino lacks coloring matter in the skin, hair, and eyes, and so is very white in appearance. Harold lives as an outcast for the first part of his life, until he runs away to the circus. He is adopted by Princess Minikin and Fossil Man. For the first time, he begins to feel accepted by others. He meets another albino, the Cannibal King. He falls in love with Flip. Harold even teaches the elephants in the show to play baseball. But Harold finds that even here, there are the "freaks" and the others that are considered normal, and he is confused as to which group he belongs.Ghost Boy is an unforgettable book that entertained as well as captured my attention. I give it five stars and highly recommend it. It was an interesting book that held many emotions, including sadness, happiness, mysteriousness, suspense, humor, and anger. Ghost Boy helped me to understand the struggles and pain of those who feel they are different

Click Here to see more reviews about: Ghost Boy



Buy Now

Click here for more information about Ghost Boy

Read More...

A Color of His Own Review

A Color of His Own
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
As a library clerk for the past two years, I have loved this book for a long time, and it's absolutely my favorite. Aside from the fact that Lionni was a giften writer and illustrator (who will be sadly missed), I love this book because it's a story about being accepted, and learning to accept yourself. As if any of us know what color we are, literally or metaphorically. The most we can hope for is to find someone with whom we can share all our different colors.

Click Here to see more reviews about: A Color of His Own



Buy NowGet 20% OFF

Click here for more information about A Color of His Own

Read More...

A Frog Thing (with Audio CD) Review

A Frog Thing (with Audio CD)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
This book is amazing! The pictures are unique in that they make you feel sorry for the charaters, but also laugh at the same time. It also delivers a powerful message about how you can do anything you put your mind to, no matter who or in this case "what" you are. This book is a must have for any childs library no matter the age.

Click Here to see more reviews about: A Frog Thing (with Audio CD)



Buy NowGet 32% OFF

Click here for more information about A Frog Thing (with Audio CD)

Read More...

Miss Twiggley's Tree Review

Miss Twiggley's Tree
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
As a first grader, I used to check this book out of our classroom library to read and re-read. I even recall spending hours tracing the illustrations. However, as an adult, I could never remember the name of that favorite book. After years of searching in libraries and book databases for children's books with "willow trees," I finally did an Internet search using the same search criteria and was delighted to find not only the correct title and author information but also to discover that it has been reprinted. I have ordered a copy and am so excited to share this wonderful story with my son.
I have also discovered that there is a clay-mation video version. I haven't seen it, but I'm hoping to. It looks very good and has won several awards. http://www.bixpix.com/what/twiggley.htm
This book is a terrific story for your kids of all ages. Don't hesitate to purchase a copy for your family!

Click Here to see more reviews about: Miss Twiggley's Tree

Why did Miss Twiggley live in a tree? Why did she send her dog, Puss, out to do the shopping? Why did she always run away and hide when people came to visit? And it was rumored that Miss Twiggley had even more peculiar habits...Old Miss TwiggleyWas friendly with bears."They shed on the sofa," she said,"But who cares?"And was it true, as the mayor's wife had heard, that she actually slept in her hat? "Simply disgraceful!" they said. But when a hurricane hits the town and the water rises, everyone is grateful to Miss Twiggley and her tree. Even better, Miss Twiggley herself learns a very important lesson, with a warm and happy ending.

Buy NowGet 32% OFF

Click here for more information about Miss Twiggley's Tree

Read More...

Wild Things Review

Wild Things
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
In WILD THINGS, protagonist Zoe no longer trusts anyone. Both her parents have now left her; her father left at an early age, and now her mother, an irresponsible mother and slob, has died. As a result of her traumatic, unbelievably self-sufficient childhood, Zoe trusts only herself.
To begin, Zoe goes to live with her uncle, Dr. Henry Royster, a surgeon. In his house she finds massive sharp metal sculptures dangling in a room, as she finds out her uncle is a famed sculptor. Though reluctant to trust Henry because everyone else in her life has failed her, Zoe finds much in common with him, especially their equally broken hearts.
All the while, Zoe meets a cast of friendly, curious characters who are loyal to Henry and begin to mend her heart, along with a wise cat and a mystical boy in the nearby forest. Zoe's curiosity, as she explores the woods, leads to adventure, heroism, and more as she unmasks the boy's identity, defiles a local lie, and more through her Wild Spirit. The tale of WILD THINGS is a wondrous page-turner.
What a phenomenal debut book by Ms. Carmichael. Throughout the story, I was stunned by the depth of the characters, and how I truly connected with many of them. My favorite part was the added perspective of the narrative of the wild cat, which adds an excellent dimension to this book. Carmichael, inspired by her actual husband, also a metal artist, skillfully weaves this story and interesting characters together to create the masterpiece that is WILD THINGS.
A must-read for all readers!
Reviewed by: Andrew S. Cohen

Click Here to see more reviews about: Wild Things



Buy NowGet 32% OFF

Click here for more information about Wild Things

Read More...

I'm the Best Review

I'm the Best
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
I love Lucy Cousins! Her books are always great for story time sharing because of the big bold pictures and her simple, beautiful stories. I'm the Best is all about a dog (in perfect rainbow plaid pants of course) who loves to brag. He is always telling his friends that he is better than they are at everything, not realizing that he is making them feel sad. The friends then tell him that they are the best at things too, and he finally understands how mean he has been. The friends forgive him and tell him they think he is the best too, and they share a nice hug. A great little story about the dangers of bragging and being a show off. But wait! You turn to the last page, and I'll be darn if that dog isn't up to his old bragging once again. Just when we thought he'd learned his lesson!
I know that final page is meant to be funny, but I wish the author had stopped with that last hug. The dog going back to his old habits just seems to take away from the message a bit. That was my only complaint about this really cute book. Ms. Cousins' illustrations are engaging and whimsical and I am once again amazed that she tells such a good story with so few words. A must have for any toddler or preschooler!

Click Here to see more reviews about: I'm the Best



Buy NowGet 60% OFF

Click here for more information about I'm the Best

Read More...

Brave Charlotte (New York Times Best Illustrated Books (Awards)) Review

Brave Charlotte (New York Times Best Illustrated Books (Awards))
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
The translated picture book is slowly getting more and more attention in America today. It used to be that you'd see a foreign translated title maybe once or twice in a year. Now, however, books from Germany and Italy and all kinds of places are getting more and more attention. Finland, however, has never had an American picture book hit. So when "Brave Charlotte" came out, it looked like the Fins had a sure thing going. A cute plot. Lovely little illustrations by a German illustrator. And it's all about an adorable sheep who just want to help others. What's not to like? Unfortunately the book just does not hang together very well. I'm not certain if it was the translation, the nature of the story, or the odd plot arc but for all it's charms, "Brave Charlotte" definitely comes off as less than satisfying. It's perfectly nice to look at and all. But I seriously question the New York Times Best Illustrated Book of the Year honor it received. Nice but definitely no wonder.
You have your normal everyday sheep, and then you have Charlotte. Right from the start she was different. When the other lambs stuck close to their mothers she would go bounding off in pursuit of adventure. When they would sleep at night she'd find a secret spot far away in the countryside where she could look at the moon. One day, the shepherd who tends the flock breaks his leg. The sheep don't know what to do and old Jack the border collie is too old to go get help. Who's it up to to save the day? Why none other than Charlotte, of course! Off she goes to get help. She fords streams, bounds over fields, hitchhikes on the highway, and finally finds a farmer who knows her and gets a doctor for the shepherd. Having proved herself, now all the sheep turn to Charlotte for guidance and protection. And Charlotte takes Jack the collie to her favorite spot.
I had some problems with the story, I have to admit. Some of these were definite translation mistakes. Translator Alyson Cole may know quite a lot about changing Finnish words into English, but she knows bupkiss about sheep. Jack the border collie is repeatedly referred to as a sheepdog. But sheepdogs are very different from collies. A sheepdog looks like a big while wooly sheep and protects the flock because it thinks it IS a sheep. Collies do the herding and the work moving about the sheep. There are other mistakes in the book as well, though. Part of the problem is the ending. The last image in the book is of Charlotte taking Jack off to see her secret spot. Jack is mentioned several times in the book by the other sheep as being old, but he never says a word himself. There isn't any contention or friendship shown between himself and Charlotte until that very last image. So why end the book with Charlotte sharing a secret when her newfound friendship with the dog is without any cause whatsoever? Then there's the problem with Charlotte's inclination towards dangerous situations. Stohner plays up Charlotte's adventurous nature, and that's all well and good at first. She climbs comically tall mountains. She climbs high trees for the fun of it. But then she starts doing dangerous things as well. She leaps, on purpose, into a "fast-running stream" for no apparent reason. Worse still, the sheep find her one day, "on the side of a dangerously busy road, staring at the oncoming traffic". She doesn't want to tell the other sheep what she's up to. Now, the other sheep are portrayed like overly timid busybodies. Then you have a youngster eyeing a busy road and their worries come off as interfering and persnickety. What a great lesson for the kids! Hey, children! Great news! If you want to cross that incredibly busy street or leap into some nearby rapids, feel free! Anyone who tells you to be careful or to watch yourself is probably just a wimp. Do what you feel instead! Sheesh. I don't usually care if a picture book has a lousy message, but I doubt very much that I'd be the only person to view this scene in the book with a slightly critical eye.
I mean, the illustrations are lovely, yes. Of course they are. Artist Henrike Wilson really does make Charlotte appear to be a very pleasant bundle of warm cuddly wool. She has a lovely little benign face that fits the story very nicely. But the fact is, I found the pictures in this bok to be far far nicer than the tale itself. So when it comes to nice sheep pictures, this book excels. When it comes to coherent sheep-centered plots, it's less than fabulous.
If you'd like an especially nice sheep-centered picture book, find yourself a copy of Rob Scotton's, "Russell the Sheep". Or Mem Fox's, "Where Is the Green Sheep?". Or books like, "Sheep In a Ship" or "Sheep In a Jeep". These are all fine and frolicsome sheepish affairs. "Brave Charlotte" is perfectly acceptable as a book but it simply does not hang together as a whole. It's fine but there are many far better sheep picture books out there to choose from. A secondary purchase at best.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Brave Charlotte (New York Times Best Illustrated Books (Awards))



Buy NowGet 25% OFF

Click here for more information about Brave Charlotte (New York Times Best Illustrated Books (Awards))

Read More...

Mathilda and the Orange Balloon Review

Mathilda and the Orange Balloon
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
Celebrity Authors TAKE NOTE: This is EXACTLY the kind of book you are trying (and repeatedly failing) to write when you take pen to hand (or fingers to keyboard). Mathilda and the Orange Balloon is a story about a limitless imagination and having the courage to believe in one's self that is told in such a deceptively simple way that even the youngest listener will delight in the story. The plot is so pure and simple and wonderfully told that it deserves to be discovered on it's own. And, as I mentioned above, the theme is a common enough one in picture books. But, don't let this dissuade you at all. As someone who has been reading picture books for decades now, out loud at work, at home to my kids and to myself, I find that I am still amazed by the author who can tell a complete story and convey a unified idea, in a matter of sentences. Maurice Sendak's classic "Where the Wild Things Are" is often noted for this quality - a quality that MATHILDA shares. On top of this superb writing by de Seve, Jen Corace delivers magnificent illustrations. Her artwork brings the words to life, but also tells a story that goes beyond the text. And, Corace's illustration style is perfectly matched to de Sève's writing style - both are simple and elegant, yet rich and satisfying.
I have already given this book as a gift and know I will give it many times more - it is a great new baby gift and a brilliant graduation gift! But, make sure you have it to read to your own kids first!

Click Here to see more reviews about: Mathilda and the Orange Balloon



Buy NowGet 22% OFF

Click here for more information about Mathilda and the Orange Balloon

Read More...

Half of an Elephant Review

Half of an Elephant
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
An award-winning illustrator from Argentina, Gusti uses "digital images of numerous discarded objects 'to show children that art can be created from objects that usually end up in the garbage can.'" And uses him he does. The discarded object illustrations are dynamic and quite humorous in their composition.
The story begins with an unexplained catastrophe: "One night, all of a sudden the world split in two." An elephant, pictured on the cover, finds his back half is missing. In his search for the rest of him, he meets other animals missing a half. And they're all suffering from a sense that something is missing.
On the other side of the world, the other halves of the animals are having the exact same problem. And combining two halves of two different animals doesn't solve anything. Some animals talk too much, and when a monkey half and an elephant half join up, they're too heavy to climb a tree.
Fortunately, all ends well for the animals, but children will love the mess inbetween as the animals combine into strange elephant-monkey, duck-elephant, chameleon-elephant hybrids.
New from Kane/Miller, "Half of an Elephant" is lots of creative fun for kids ages 4-8 and is an excellent choice for an art lesson at school or at home. Read the book and inspire discarded-object art.


Click Here to see more reviews about: Half of an Elephant



Buy NowGet 25% OFF

Click here for more information about Half of an Elephant

Read More...

A Very Big Bunny Review

A Very Big Bunny
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
A VERY BIG BUNNY by Marisabina Russo tells of Amelia, a very big bunny who is too tall to jump rope, get on the seesaw, or play games with the other bunnies. Amelia is very lonely - until a new, small student joins the class - and seems to like Amelia. Can they find things in common despite very different sizes and abilities?

Click Here to see more reviews about: A Very Big Bunny



Buy NowGet 22% OFF

Click here for more information about A Very Big Bunny

Read More...

How Fletcher Was Hatched Review

How Fletcher Was Hatched
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
As an elementary teacher, I'm surprised this book is not more popular today. I remember it from my childhood as being my very favorite picture book, partly because we had a dog like Fletcher. Fletcher demonstrates an intense devotion and insecurity about his mistress's love for him. He's jealous of the chickens she raises. To solve this problem, he gets his friends to build a gigantic egg around him, hoping to get her attention by resembling the eggs/chickens she dotes upon. It's a creative way to solve his problem. I plan to use the book in my classroom to illustrate point of view, problem solving, cooperation and character's feelings. (Plus I just like any story that's about a dog!)

Click Here to see more reviews about: How Fletcher Was Hatched

Fletcher is a large hound dog with brown spots, and hismistress is a little girl named Alexandra.The trouble starts becauseAlexandra is interested in baby chicks - tiny, fluffy, yellow chichk thatsay "Peep!" as they come out of their shells. Fletcher's water dish is empty.He hasn't had his ears scratched in days. "She's forgotten me," he decides, and mournfully he shuffles off to thepark at the edge of town.Here Fletcher's good friends, Beaver and Otter,have the idea.Fletcher must hatch!Of course, Beaver is a masterbuilder, and it's no trouble at all to build an egg around Fletcher.Theegg is large and pink and speckled with brown, and it poses somewhat of aproblem for the school principal, not to mention the science teacher.Butyoung readers will delight in the hilarious climax, along with a littlegirl named Alexandra.

Buy Now

Click here for more information about How Fletcher Was Hatched

Read More...

Wee Little Chick Review

Wee Little Chick
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
My 2 year old boy has loved this book for several months now. I like that the illustrations represent what baby animals look like, and the story is simple enough that my son has been able to follow along well and repeat some of the words. I plan to get the other books in the series for him.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Wee Little Chick

Wee Little Chicken is the smalles of all his new brothers and sisters. Will he let that stop him from climbing the highest, running the fastest, and chirping the loudest? No way - when he puts his mind to it, Wee Little Chicken just might show all of the animals on the farm that wee little is just the right size.

Buy NowGet 22% OFF

Click here for more information about Wee Little Chick

Read More...

January's Child: A Birthday Month Book Review

January's Child: A Birthday Month Book
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
This book is not only beautiful to look at but also to read and listen to. The words are inspiring and has something to make each child feel special. The illustrations are so vibrant and colorful, but uncomplicated so that it is easy for a child to appreciate and enjoy. This book is perfect for a birthday or shower gift. I have a few teacher friends and I will be recommending this to them for their classes, to celebrate their students birthday months.

Click Here to see more reviews about: January's Child: A Birthday Month Book

"You were born in your very own month of the year and the world was waiting to welcome you here with daydreams and wishes and circles of love and in turn you brought a gift from above...."Every day is someone's birthday, which January's Child celebrates with creative attributes for each month of the year. More positive than the traditional Monday's Child rhyme, and geared for families to share among youngest and oldest members, this is a beautifully illustrated treasury sure to become a classic, evergreen gift for new babies.

Buy NowGet 60% OFF

Click here for more information about January's Child: A Birthday Month Book

Read More...