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* A Booklist Editors' Choice
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Reading level: Baby-Preschool
Edition: Paperback, 32 pages
ISBN: 0698113950
Ã¥ Å©±â: 25.2cm x 20.5cm
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Annotation
While looking for his missing trousers, Little Bear discovers that the other toy animals have found many different uses for them.
From the Publisher
When Little Bear gets up one morning, his trousers are gone. Where could they be? Old Bear just doesn't know. Sailor, Camel, and Rabbit have seen them and used them in some un-trouserly ways. But no one can tell Little Bear where his trousers are now. When Little Bear finally discovers his trousers, even he is surprised at what he finds! Now, in this delightful board book edition, Jane Hissey's lovable bear comes to life for even the youngest of readers. Jane Hissey's Old Bear and his friends are featured weekly in the television series of the same name.
Children's Literature
The original version from Jane Hissey's Old Bear and Friends has been adapted to fit a board book. Little Bear wakes up one morning to find that his trousers are missing. As he visits with the other stuffed animals (he is a fuzzy brown teddy bear), each recounts how he used the trousers and then passed them along. The inset illustrations below the text show how the trousers were used. The pictures are amusing and the story has a delicious surprise at the end. A treat for a new generation of young kids. 1999 (orig. - Marilyn Courtot
School Library Journal
One morning, Little Bear wakes to find his trousers missing, so he goes from one stuffed-animal friend to another in search of them. Each time, he's one step behind, finding that his clothing has been used and passed along: Sailor tried them as sails for his boat, Rabbit as a hat, with plenty of room for his ears, etc. Finally, Little Bear re trieves his trousers from Bramwell Brown, who has converted them to a double-barreled icing bag to decorate the cake he's baked. All share the cake in celebration of the trousers' return. This is a playful extension of the imaginative game of taking an object and finding various uncustomary uses. It's an idea that works better visually than it does in words, and the pictures here stand out in their near photo-realism and their dimen sionality. Those are real toys on the page, fiber by fiber, but at the same time, they look quite reasonably capable of moving and talking. It's just the visual represen tation of the life that small children can breathe into their toys, and the close-up perspective adds to the sense of realism. The illustrations are the strength of the book; the text repeats information found in them, belaboring the point, and it has its precious moments. It's fun to look at, especially with those pleasantly vibrant colors. Karen Litton, Confederation Centre Public Library, Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, Canada
From Publishers Weekly
Hissey's textured illustrations, so lifelike that they resemble hand-tinted photographs, are as remarkable here as in her Old Bear. All the toy characters are back, helping Little Bear locate lost trousers, which everyone has used differently: Camel as hump-warmers, Rabbit as a holey ski hat, Dog as a two-bone bone-holder, among others. Little Bear despairs but finds that his trousers are now Bramwell Brown's icing baghe's frosting a cake. The cake is dubbedrather arbitrarily, it seemsTrousers Day Cake, and Little Bear is soothed. That forgiveably weak ending is offset by the snug household scenes the friends inhabit; the rooms aren't scaled down, so there's a perfectly delightful depiction of Rabbit skiing down a slick bannister on tongue depressors. From the nubby terry-cloth towel to the pearl stitches of a knit hat and shiny chrome faucets, Hissey's world makes readers believe that Old Bear could be just around the next corner. |
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