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* ALA Notable Children¡¯s Book
* ALA Booklist Editors¡¯ Choice
* Kentucky Bluegrass Award
¾ðÁ¦³ª À¯¸Ó°¡ ³ÑÄ¡´Â Áñ°Å¿î ¹®Àåµé°ú Ç㸦 Â´Â Àý¹¦ÇÑ ¶óÀÓÀ¸·Î ¹Ì±¹¿¡¼ °¡Àå ¸¹Àº »ç¶ûÀ» ¹Þ´Â µ¿½Ã ÀÛ°¡ÀÎ Jack PrelutskyÀÇ ´ëÇ¥ÀÛµéÀ» ¸ð¾Æ³õÀº ½ÃÁýÀÔ´Ï´Ù.
ÃÑ 100 ¿©ÆíÀÌ ¼ö·ÏµÇ¾î ÀÖÀ¸¸ç, Àú¸íÇÑ IllustratorÀÎ James StevensonÀÇ À¯¸Ó·¯½ºÇÑ »ðÈ ±×¸²µéÀÌ ½Ã¸¦ °¨»óÇÏ´Â Àç¹Ì¸¦ ´õÇØÁÝ´Ï´Ù.
Jack Prelutsky´Â 2006³â¿¡ ¹Ì±¹ Poetry Foundation¿¡ ÀÇÇØ ¼ö¿©µÇ´Â Children's Poet Laureate¸¦ ÃÖÃÊ·Î ¼ö»óÇϱ⵵ Çß½À´Ï´Ù.
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Paperback: 160 pages
ISBN-10: 0061857750
ISBN-13: 978-0061857751
Ã¥ Å©±â: 18.4 cm x 22.7 cm
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Book Description
A poetry collection to tickle your funny bone, Something Big Has Been Here features more than 100 original poems and black-and-white drawings from the best-selling team of Jack Prelutsky and James Stevenson. Here are four ferocious tigers, a meat loaf that defies an ax, five flying hot dogs-and many, many more people, animals, and things that are destined to become a part of the lives of everyone who loves to laugh.
Publishers Weekly
If this anthology of light verse and black-and-white drawings from Prelutsky and Stevenson were a movie, it would be titled The New Kid on the Block Part II. In format, subject matter and tone, fans of the earlier volumes will rejoice in finding more of the same. These are not poems to savor for their metaphoric language or depth of thought, but are instead frivolous, rib-tickling verses about the "Ghost Who's Lost His Boo," about "Rhododendra Rosenbloom" who buys perfume from a "ten scent store," or about the "Fearless Flying Hotdogs" who are "mustered in formation / to climb, to dip, to dive." Prelutsky's comic monologues focus on such topics as "I am Tired of Being Little" or "I'm Sorry! for being a brat," or the irresistible declaration of love, "Warteena Weere Just Bit My Ear." From Twickles and Moodles to the making of Grasshopper Gumbo, the emphasis is on the preposterous. Stevenson's waggish drawings provide half the fun in this comic collection that skips lightly on the mind and tongue.
Kirkus Reviews
His rhymes are infectious, his verses ineradicable. |
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