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I like meÀÇ ÀúÀÚÀÎ Nancy CarlsonÀÇ Àç¹ÌÀÖ´Â ±×¸²Ã¥ÀÔ´Ï´Ù. Ä£±¸µéÀ» Á¤¶³¾îÁö°Ô ÇÒ ¼ö ÀÖ´Â 6°¡Áö ¹æ¹ýÀ» ÅëÇØ ¾î¸° ¾ÆÀ̵éÀÌ ÀÚ½ÅÀº ¾î¶²Áö¸¦ µ¹¾Æº¸°Ô ÇÏ´Â ÇÏ´Â reverse etiquette bookÀÔ´Ï´Ù.
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Edition: Paperback: 32 pages
ISBN: 0140558624
Ã¥ Å©±â : 22.3cm x 18.2cm
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Book description
With exuberant pictures and a tongue-in-cheek sense of humor, the author of I Like Me! takes a light-hearted look at bratty behavior that will have children laughing in recognition while learning exactly how not to behave. Colored-pencil illustrations throughout.
Children's Literature
Six easy steps to success, if losing your friends is your goal. You can: never smile or share; be a bully and a poor sport; perfect your tattling; and whine your way into having no friends to bother you. That means you can eat your plate of cookies all by yourself! We can laugh at horrible behavior in others, especially when their reward turns out to be just what they asked for. Even a very young audience can appreciate the tongue-in-cheek humor as they follow the recipe. It's uncomplicated and bittersweet with bright pictures to light the way. In the end, those cookies taste much better when shared with friends.
School Library Journal
This reverse etiquette book advises readers to never smile or share; to be a bully and whine; to tattle and be a poor sport. Each ``rule'' offers specific examples and is illustrated with brightly colored pictures. While children are always interested in stories showing the complications and potential pitfalls of social interactions, this plotless treatment is not likely to hold much appeal for them. Also, it's unfortunate that ``tattling'' is presented as undesirable. Granted, the examples given are minor ones involving friends who are misbehaving in not terribly destructive ways, but youngsters do need to know that there are situations in which ``telling'' is perfectly acceptable. Carlson's cartoon-style art is a little more crudely done here than in her previous books, and her figures are more angular, as they ``Push in front of the lunch line'' or ``Cheat at cards.''
Booklist
Carlson's set of "simple instructions" is a send-up of adult self-help books and collections of genteel counsel aimed at children. The artwork and the advice she gathers refer to common home and school behaviors children know about and are told to avoid: "If you are eating cookies, hide them when your friends come over." Pushing in the lunch line, whining, tattling, and sibling teasing are illustrated with zippy pictures that strongly contrast having fun and being mean.
Kirkus Reviews
``If you don't want to have any friends, follow these simple instructions.'' So begins Carlson's hilarious catalogue of crankiness, brattiness, snottiness, and just plain bad behavior. Be gloomy. Grab all the good toys for yourself. Be a bully. Cheat, tattle, and above all whine. ``When you play tag and someone tags you, lie, and say they missed.'' All of this will sound familiar to parents and children alike, but the author takes the perfect approach--one that manages to make such traits unappealing without ever sounding like she's finger-wagging. The illustrations are similarily light and humorous, with lots of appropriate facial expressions to back up the text of this slight but amusing book. |
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