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ÆäÀÌÆÛ¹éÀÎ "Elmer"¿Í ¹Ì´ÏºÏÀÎ "Elmer and the Rainbow" 2±Ç ¼¼Æ®ÀÔ´Ï´Ù.
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Edition: Paperback 2±Ç ¼¼Æ®
ISBN: 9781783446391
Ã¥ Å©±â(Elmer): 27.5 cm x 24 cm, 32 pages
Ã¥ Å©±â(Elmer and the Rainbow): 16 cm x 14 cm, 32 pages
[ ¿µ¹® ¼Æò ]
Book Description
There was once a herd of elephants, all happy and all the same colour. Elmer was different. Elmer was patchwork. Elmer was NOT elephant colour.
Package includes a paperback copy of Elmer and a mini-book, Elmer and the Rainbow.
Publisher's Weekly
Elmer the elephant is a colorful character. His heady optimism and unbridled sense of humor keep the entire community in a cheery mood. And Elmer's unusual multicolored checkerboard hide is the wonder of all the other elephants, who are characteristically gray. In spite of his sunny disposition, Elmer begins to feel conspicuous. He starts to believe the others are laughing at him because of his crazy patchwork coat. When Elmer discovers a bush in the jungle with elephant-colored berries, he shakes the bush and rolls in a berry mash until he is as gray as the others. Now no one seems to notice him; for a time he enjoys his anonymity, but after a while he begins to realize just how quiet and dull things are when he's not around. Finally the practical joker in Elmer emerges, and he soon has the whole gang laughing again. McKee's gentle humor and love of irony are in full force in this celebration of individuality and laughter. Well-designed spreads are washed with stunning color and the use of textured, painted and airbrushed surfaces contributes to the powerful visual impression.
About the Author
David McKee grew up in Devon, England. Later, while a student at Plymouth Art College, he began selling his cartoon drawings to newspapers. Since 1964 he has published a number of successful books for children, including the King Rollo stories, which he helped animate for British television. His first book for Lothrop was Snow Woman, of which Publishers Weekly said, "It is McKee's superb humor--conveyed almost solely in the illustrations...that wins the day." Of his second Lothrop book, Who's a Clever Baby, Publishers Weekly had this to say: "Grandma's alliterative frenzies are fascinating and readers will find Baby's manipulative stubbornness vastly amusing." |
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