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Paperback, 64 pages
ISBN: 0064441539
Ã¥ Å©±â : 21.5cm x 14.8cm
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Book Description
Monster in the barn!
It's a dark and stormy night, and something -- or someone -- is glowing in the barn. Is it a monster? It's up to best friends Minnie and Moo to find out!
Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books
These gleeful fantasies are currently the cream of the beginning-reader crop.
Publishers Weekly
All the animals are running scared when a thunderstorm strikes the barnyard in Denys Cazet's Minnie and Moo Meet Frankenswine. The two courageous cows unmask the mystery of a reputed monster on the premises. This seventh book about Minnie and Moo, a series formerly published by DK Ink, joins the I Can Read books series. (Sept.) Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.
Children's Literature
Minnie and Moo are camping out under a tree when they are awakened by a crash of lightning and thunder. The animals all come racing out of the barn because there is some monster there. Suddenly it seems like the monster is now in the farmer's house-there doesn't seem to be any refuge. Well, there is no real monster, but the poor visiting pig Olga does receive a bit of a shock. There is a lot more to this amusing story-plenty of puns and references to other characters in stories and an ending that will surely bring smiles. One of the more amusing stories involving this charming pair of bovine buddies. An "I Can Read Book."- Marilyn Courtot
School Library Journal
Gr 1-2-Two books sure to please the never-ending requests for Halloween stories. In Frankenswine, Minnie and Moo solve a mystery about a monster in the barn that is terrifying the animals. Rumors abound, resulting in moments of humor, such as the farmyard denizens thinking that a branch is the farmer's leg. Cazet's softly colored illustrations of the fearful animals and the brave bovines add to the appeal. In Grandmas Trick-or-Treat, Pip is once again stuck in the middle between her totally different grandmothers. One thinks Halloween is great fun; the other thinks it brings out the worst in people. In the end, the two women work together to teach some bullies a lesson and find that the festivities can bring out the best in people. McCully's art, done predominately in the rusts and golds of autumn, highlights the children's activities, but it's really the grannies who steal the show here. Both books have easy-to-read texts and large print.-Sharon R. Pearce, Geronimo Public School, OK Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.
Kirkus Reviews
The two funniest, most winsome cows on the early-reading circuit have to be Minnie and Moo, always ready to engage any situation with a mixture of slapstick (Moo), sangfroid (Minnie), and a comical use of language. Here, the two are sleeping out under the stars when a storm blows in, bringing lightning and thunder. A bolt hits a nearby barn: "Lightning flashed. Thunder rumbled. There was a scream in the night." The scream is that of a rooster who is convinced there is a monster in the barn. "Every chicken for himself," the rooster squawks. Olga, a piglet, is missing, and worse still, when the animals flee to the farmhouse, it appears that the farmer's leg has been pulled off by the monster and thrown out the window. At least it appears so to the animals; readers will notice rather quickly that the "leg" is an apple-tree branch. It takes Minnie's sensible head to straighten things out, including the discovery of Olga, shimmering with a halo of electricity after standing too close to the milker when lightning struck. Deceptively sophisticated artwork and lively language-" 멠oor Olga,' a pig wept. 멒one,' cried another. 멒one, gone, gone,' said Zeke. 멛ike a turkey through the corn,' said Zack"-make this a joy for new readers to tackle. (Easy reader. 4-8) |
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