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¸Å¿ù ù¹øÂ° ¸ñ¿äÀÏÀº ¸¶À»¿¡ Ä¿´Ù¶õ ÀåÀÌ ¿¸®´Â ³¯ÀÔ´Ï´Ù. Å×½º´Â Ç×»ó ÀÌ ³¯À» ¼Õ²Å¾Æ ±â´Ù¸³´Ï´Ù. Àå¿¡ °¡¸é ´ç³ª±Í, ¼Ò, ¾ç, µÅÁö, ´ß µî ¿Â°® µ¿¹°µéµµ º¼ ¼ö ÀÖ°í, ¸ÀÀÖ´Â ±º°ÍÁú °Å¸®µµ °¡µæÇϸç, IJÀ» »ïŰ´Â °î¿¹»ç³ª °øÁßµ¹±â¸¦ ÇÏ´Â ¿ø¼þÀÌ µî º¼°Å¸®µµ dz¼ºÇÏÁö¿ä. Tess¿Í Ä£±¸ Wee Boy´Â ½ÃÀå ±¸¼®±¸¼®À» µ¹¾Æ´Ù´Ï¸ç ³î¶ó¿ò°ú ½Å±âÇÔÀ» ¸¸³£ÇÕ´Ï´Ù... Caldecott ¼ö»óÀÛ°¡ÀÎ Eve BuntingÀÇ ¾î¸± Àû °æÇèÀ» ¹ÙÅÁÀ¸·Î ÀåÀÌ ¿¸®´Â ³¯ÀÇ ¼³·¹ÀÌ´Â ¾ÆÀÌµé ¸¶À½À» Àß º¸¿©ÁÖ¸ç, Holly BerryÀÇ folk-art style ±×¸²Àº ¾ÆÀÏ·£µå ÀåÅÍÀÇ Èï°Ü¿òÀ» »ýµ¿°¨ÀÖ°Ô Àß Ç¥ÇöÇϰí ÀÖ½À´Ï´Ù.
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Edition: Hardcover, 32 pages
ISBN-10: 0060253649
ISBN-13: 978-0060253646
Ã¥ Å©±â : 28.8cm x 21.5cm
[ ¿µ¹® ¼Æò ]
Book description
Market Day...is the best day of the month, if you ask Tess. There are pigs, chickens, and sheep to see, gob stoppers and cherry lips to eat, a lace-stealing goat to watch, and more. Baba-Ali is swallowing the swords, Nuts, the organ grinder's monkey, is up to mischief, and Madame Savanna will predict the future - for only half a penny! Market Day is wonderful, but is it long enough?
Publisher's Weekly
It's almost impossible to read this winsome tale without lapsing into an Irish brogue. Seven-year-old Tess meets her friend, Wee Boy, at the market held monthly in their Irish village. A lively affair, with a cornucopia of colorful goods for sale, market day also serves as a setting for unusual performances by extravagant characters, such as Baba-Ali, the sword swallower, and Jehosophat, who walks on hot coals,. Of course, the streets are filled with plenty of noisy livestock, too. Bunting (Smoky Night; Train to Somewhere, reviewed below) succeeds in finding just the right sensory ingredients to captivate a child. On bite-size honeycombs: "The honey tastes of the flowers the bees drank from, and the wax is as thick in your mouth as chewing gum." Tess's friendship with Wee Boy, whose growth has been stunted, adds a tender underpinning to the story; Tess spends her last ha'penny on a reassuring fortune-teller, who predicts that Wee Boy will be "big and brave as [he'll] ever need to be." Berry (The Gift of Christmas) illustrates with stylized simplicity, tempering her brio with attention to patterns. Bright natural colors convey the gaiety of the market against a backdrop of fieldstone houses and cobbled streets. A Celtic charmer.
Children's Literature
Market Day in Ireland is exciting and wonderful for two friends, Tess and Wee Boy. They share a full range of activities; observing the sale of sheep, goats, and pigs, listening to music by the organ grinder, watching sword swallowing, and viewing a man walking on red-hot coals. Tess has a penny to spend, and she shares what it can buy in this warm tale of friendship.
School Library Journal
A gentle story, set in Ireland. Bunting recalls the bustle and excitement of each first Thursday of the month, as Tess, a girl of seven, dreams of just how to spend the Market Day penny her father gives her. The sights and smells where sheep are marked with different color blobs of paint to indicate their owners, and people are well advised to wear their "Wellies" around the horses, cows, goats, and pigs. The child and her friend Wee Boy take it all in: including the street musicians, sword swallower, and fortune teller. Berry's simple folk-art paintings crowded with animals and townspeople add just the right flavor to the book. Just when readers might think this title is merely painting a descriptive picture of a happily remembered time, they realize that Bunting, sly as a leprechaun, has slipped in a message of kindness, sweeter than any "gob stopper" Tess could have bought. Like the children in the story, readers will come away from Market Day completely satisfied and looking forward to a repeat performance.
Kirkus Reviews
Bunting (Dandelions, 1995, etc.) evokes an old-fashioned Irish Market Day in an era in which it took all day to spend a penny. Pig-tailed Tess, age seven, and her friend, Wee Boy, who "never grew past four," enjoy the cheerful commotion of farm animals ("you can't walk in the street without your Wellies" because of what the animals "have been doing"), a lace petticoat-stealing goat, and sideshow performers ("We're hoping something interesting will appear on the point," they say of the sword swallower). When Wee Boy worries that he'll always be wee, Tess spends her last ha'penny on a gypsy fortuneteller. Madame Savanna tells Wee Boy he'll be as "big and brave" as he needs to be. Her reassurance may sound a little hollow to readers who remember the words of Tess's mother, that the gypsy "makes up what people want to hear" in her hope-filled visions. Although the rambling story never really meshes - this is a leisurely and chaotic visit - there's so much warmth, ebullience, and jaunty charm in Berry's good-humored paintings that every page offers a richly satisfying eyeful. |
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