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Edition: Paperback: 48 pages
ISBN: 0060514183
Ã¥ Å©±â: 21.3cm x 14cm
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Book Description
Pish and Posh are very best friends. They live in the same house, share their chores, and usually get along.
One day, a Fairy Handbook mysteriously lands at their door. An awfully curious Posh can't resist the book's magic, despite Pish's warnings. When Posh learns that being a beginner fairy is tough work; and possibly big trouble; will Posh turn to her wise friend Pish for help?
Young readers are sure to fall in love with this adorable and riotously original new pair of characters!
Publishers Weekly
This whimsical I Can Read Book by husband-and-wife collaborators (It's Not Marsha's Birthday) opens with a bang-literally: "After dinner, there was a loud thud outside the front door." Racing to the doorstep, a delighted Posh discovers a copy of The Fairy Handbook while her more sensible, skeptical best friend and housemate Pish firmly declares, "We are not becoming fairies." Posh obviously has other ideas, as she scans the tome in a futile attempt to discover a fairy's method for doing dishes quickly. She fails to read the instructions closely, however, and when a wand appears at the door, she waves it with cheerful abandon, causing "mountains of suds" to escape from the sink. The youngster's subsequent (mis)use of the handbook to retrieve her friend Izzy's missing dog brings similarly outlandish results, as Posh inadvertently conjures up a troll, mermaid and giant-but no pooch. The much taller, sophisticatedly dressed Pish presents quite a contrast to Posh, who sports a yellow polka-dotted frock and an oversize hair bow, but the two do share several characteristics-brilliant red tresses out of which poke elfin ears, providing an extra dollop of fun. Bottner's buoyant pictures feature comical facial expressions, adding the right tone to this breezy portrait of an opposites-attract friendship.
Children's Literature
The "I Can Read" books have been a classic staple for beginning readers since Else Homelund Minarik and Maurice Sendak's Little Bear. Now along come best friends Pish and Posh, with humor, whimsy and charming characters, delightfully illustrated in bright colors by Bottner. Pish, the oldest, and Posh are just finishing dinner when—WHAM!—something lands on their steps. The Fairy Handbook! Posh readily concludes that it would be a great idea to become fairies. Pish is not so sure, since Posh's ideas usually have a knack for turning out badly. But Posh pushes on, beginning with applying a little fairy magic to the dirty dishes, then locating her friend Izzy's lost dog. A fairy wand and dust, also discovered on the steps should help. A flood, troll, giant, under-the-bed monster and mermaid later, Posh concedes that reading the whole chapter, even though it's long, might be a good idea. And that's where Pish comes in to rescue the day. This is a charming book; hand it to a new reader and he or she will be clamoring for more Pish and Posh adventures. And did anyone notice the fairy ears sprouting on their heads?
School Library Journal
This book scores a hit with two well-defined characters: irrepressible, curious, impatient Posh and the more mature and methodical Pish. When a copy of The Fairy Handbook is mysteriously left on their doorstep, Posh can't wait to give it a try but Pish insists that her friend must first finish her chores. However, Posh is not discouraged, and she attempts to cast several spells without reading all of the fine print. Before long, she discovers that finding a magical solution to a problem sometimes creates an even greater dilemma. Although this beginning reader has the requisite large font and controlled vocabulary, nothing is lost in the story's simple presentation, and the plot builds to a satisfying climax. Strategically placed to aid new readers, Bottner's humorous illustrations convey the action well. The characters, who have elfin ears, are delightfully drawn and full of expression. An excellent addition to any library, this story will keep youngsters quickly turning pages and persevering until the last line.
Kirkus Reviews
Much ado about very little in this incoherently sketchy easy reader. Finding in succession a copy of The Fairy Handbook, a magic wand, and a packet of fairy dust on her porch, impulsive young Posh tries to do the dishes and find a neighbor's missing pooch by magic. Not being one to read instructions, however, she fills the kitchen with suds, discovers a mermaid in the bathtub, and creates sundry other mishaps. Luckily, she lives with Pish, a more methodical "best friend," but also, to judge from the resemblance in Bottner's rapidly drawn illustrations, either her mother or her big sister, who reins her in and organizes the clean-up. Pish and Posh both sport pointy, doglike ears in the course of this episode-which, along with the fit-and-start pacing may leave young readers wondering what they're missing. Not much.
About the Author:
Barbara Bottner is the author of many favorites for young readers, including Two Messy Friends, which she also illustrated, the ever-popular Bootsie Barker Bites, illustrated by Peggy Rathmann, Bootsie Barker Ballerina, also an I Can Read Book, illustrated by G. Brian Karas, as well as the recent picture books Charlene Loves To Make Noise, illustrated by Alexander Stadler, and The Scaredy Cats, illustrated by Victoria Chess. She lives with her husband — physician, coauthor, and best friend — Gerald Kruglik, in Florida. |
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