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* ABA Pick of the Lists
¹Ð¸®¾ð¼¿·¯ÀÎ Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad DayÀÇ ÀúÀÚÀÎ Judith ViorstÀÇ À§Æ®°¡ ³ÑÄ¡´Â Ã¥ÀÔ´Ï´Ù. ±×¸²Àº Alexander, Who's Not Going to Move¿¡¼ Judith Viorst¿Í ÄÞºñ¸¦ ÀÌ·ð´ø Robin Preiss Glasser°¡ ÀÌ Ã¥¿¡¼µµ Ææ°ú ¹°°¨À» ÀÌ¿ëÇÑ Àç¹ÌÀÖ´Â ±×¸²À» º¸¿©ÁÝ´Ï´Ù.
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Edition: Paperback: 32 pages
ISBN-10: 0689866178
ISBN-13: 978-0689866173
Ã¥ Å©±â: 21.6 cm x 27.9 cm
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Book Description
It's hard being practically perfect and having the world's messiest younger sister. Big sister is constantly urging Sophie to be neat -- "like me, Olivia" -- but whether at home, at school, trick-or-treating on Halloween, or even at the beach, Sophie is a disaster. Still, as big brother, Jake, and their parents keep reminding Olivia, Sophie does have some redeeming qualities.
Sophie joins the legendary Alexander as super-completely and totally one of Judith Viorst's most irresistible characters ever.
Publisher's Weekly
The title of this slender tale describes a girl who is as clumsy as she is messy. "Her antics will surely elicit grins and perhaps even giggles from young readers," according to PW.
Children's Literature
Our rather self-righteous narrator, Olivia, despairs at the incredible messiness of her little sister Sophie. At home, in school, at parties, the beach, the circus, or a farm, Sophie can cause incredible confusion in no time at all. Olivia and her mother and father keep trying to remind Olivia how not to mess up, but "she forgets." In describing one wild catastrophe after another, Olivia makes us smile at her lovable but disaster-prone sister. Glasser's pen and ink and watercolor illustrations are appropriately frenetic. The jacket/cover of prim Olivia watching Sophie in action barely hints at the awesome destructive force generated by this angelic-looking demon. Much of the drawing is produced in black outline so that color can really demonstrate the chaos only suggested in the text. 2001, Atheneum Books for Young Readers/Simon & Schuster Children's Publishing Division, . Ages 4 to 8. Reviewer: Ken Marantz and Sylvia Marantz
School Library Journal
Olivia emphatically states that her younger sister, Sophie, is the messiest human being around and proceeds to tell of the chaos that her sibling creates. Glasser's pen-and-ink and watercolor illustrations are full of inviting detail. They show Sophie's closet contents; a bedroom impassible with toys, clothes, and artistic creations; numerous experimental doll projects gone awry; mishaps at the beach and farm; and always the exuberant Sophie who tries, really tries, to be more like the neat and nearly perfect Olivia. While the younger child works her havoc outside the boundaries of acceptable (and believable) behavior, the narrator hastens to add that dad says that Sophie is smart and funny; their older brother adds that she's great at dancing and puzzles; and mom says that Sophie's really a kind and nice person. It's all pure fun with an undertone of acceptance that's positively reassuring, and maybe even a little bit encouraging, to creative clutzes and anyone else who has ever messed up while messing around.
Kirkus Reviews
Viorst's tale of two sisters comically captures the vast diversity in personality that can exist between siblings. Olivia, the narrator and older of the two, regales readers with the misadventures of her younger sibling, Sophie. Olivia is neat while Sophie is decidedly not—and therein lies the source of potential discord. Like a seasoned attorney, Olivia presents her case to the reader, offering, albeit unintentionally, one more hilarious tale after another in an attempt to depict Sophie's haphazard existence. A quintessential pre-adolescent, Olivia's diatribe is liberally sprinkled with youthful exuberance and exaggeration, containing fine examples of sibling disdain."No, I'm NOT a rude person. I would never, ever, EVER call Sophie a pig. I'm only saying that PIGS think Sophie's a pig." While addressing readers in a chummy, just-between-us manner, Olivia's tone comes across rather overbearing and superior. Yet here too Viorst has taken a page from real life, for what older sibling doesn't harbor some feelings of superiority over their hapless younger relations? However, the vivacious Sophie is truly irrepressible, enthusiastically charging forward to embrace life's offerings, and even Olivia ultimately has to acknowledge her younger sister's nobler attributes. Finely detailed with a keen comic undertone, Glasser's drawings are a perfect fit for Viorst's wry tale. Pen-and-ink drawings come to life with vivid splashes of watercolors, which fill in only certain portions of the illustrations. Brimming with an abundance of visual sallies, these pages are as much fun for readers to examine as to hear. While cleaning fanatics will empathize with Olivia, the rest of the population will belonging to make the lively, free-spirited Sophie their new best friend. (Picture book. 5-8) |
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