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Edition: Paperback: 48 pages
ISBN: 0064442772
Ã¥ Å©±â : 21.3cm x 14cm
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Book Description
Tricks or
treats?
It's Halloween night and Grandma Sal wants everyone to play tricks. Grandma Nan wants all of the trick-or-treaters to have good manners. The grandmas' arguing is driving Pip and her friends crazy!
From the Publisher
From Caldecott Medal winner Emily Arnold McCully comes a new story in her popular series about Pip and her grandmas. It's Halloween, and Pip and her friends are excited to go trick-or-treating, but her grandmas could spoil all the fun. Grandma Nan wants everyone on their best behavior, and grandma Sal wants everyone to play tricks. While the grandmas argue, Pip and her friends sneak away on their own—and run into some scary surprises. McCully's lush pictures add suspense and excitement to one of beginning readers' favorite holidays—Halloween.
Publishers Weekly
Two new beginning readers will entice the school-age set. Grandma's Trick-or-Treat by Emily Arnold McCully tells the story of Pip and her friend, Pip's two very different grandmas and a night of unexpected fun and surprises. (Sept.) Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.
School Library Journal
Gr 1-2-Two books sure to please the never-ending requests for Halloween stories. In Frankenswine, Minnie and Moo solve a mystery about a monster in the barn that is terrifying the animals. Rumors abound, resulting in moments of humor, such as the farmyard denizens thinking that a branch is the farmer's leg. Cazet's softly colored illustrations of the fearful animals and the brave bovines add to the appeal. In Grandmas Trick-or-Treat, Pip is once again stuck in the middle between her totally different grandmothers. One thinks Halloween is great fun; the other thinks it brings out the worst in people. In the end, the two women work together to teach some bullies a lesson and find that the festivities can bring out the best in people. McCully's art, done predominately in the rusts and golds of autumn, highlights the children's activities, but it's really the grannies who steal the show here. Both books have easy-to-read texts and large print.-Sharon R. Pearce, Geronimo Public School, OK Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.
Kirkus Reviews
Caldecott winner McCully (Mirette on the Highwire, 1992, etc.) adds another to her stories and pictures of Pip's grandmas in I Can Read format. This one, in three chapters, can easily be handled by a new reader. Pip's Grandma Nan swoops in on Halloween to whisk Pip into an angel costume, but that isn't what Pip had chosen-a pencil costume is her own design. Then Grandma Sal scares them all, coming to the door completely wrapped in bandages. So both grandmas take Pip (penciled in this time) and her buddies out trick-or-treating, Grandma Nan insisting that the children be polite and not play tricks, Grandma Sal opting for being scary. The kids try ditching the grandmas, but are threatened by pirate Bertha, who tries to steal their treats. Bertha is shooed away by two monsters who look much like grandmas, and all ends well. The illustrations are full of autumn-leaf colors, deepening shadows, and lots of orange and black. The two grandmas could scarcely be more of a contrast: grayed and angular Grandma Nan wears pumpkin earrings, a miniskirt, tights, and boots; Grandma Sal, who never gets out of her bandages, is rounder, cheerier, and has white curly hair. As usual, there's room for both. A real treat. (Easy reader. 5-8)
Booklist
Gr. 1-2, younger for reading aloud. Halloween brings out the worst and the best in the characters from McCully's Grandmas at the Lake (1990) in this simple chapter book in the An I Can Read series. "Be polite," says bossy Grandma Nan. "Be scary," says Grandma Sal. But neither is any good when it comes to trick-or-treating. The children wish both grandmas would go away--until the local bullies try to steal the kids' treats and the monster grandmas show who's boss. McCully's detailed line-and-watercolor illustrations on every page extend the fun with sly affection. Skinny Grandma Nan insists she's not wearing a costume, but in her miniskirt and cowboy boots, she's nearly as outlandish as chubby Grandma Sal, who's bandaged as a mummy. In a wonderful climactic double-page spread, the warm fall colors give way to creepy blues and blacks as the fanged grandma monsters rout the bullies. Then grandmas and kids share the treats. This is a book to enjoy across generations--for the holiday farce and for the adult characters who act like kids. Hazel Rochman |
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