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* IRA/CBC Children's Choice
* Parents' Choice Gold Award
Ʊ ڼ ȭ ۰ Jean Craighead George ȭ ̷ åԴϴ. Ʊ 밡 ¾ θ Ʒ, ʿ 鼭 ڶ ڼ ݴϴ. 25Ⱓ ¸ ۰ Jean Craighead George "Julie of the Wolves" , ڽ å ϴ. Ʊ ¾ θ Ʒ ο, 峭ġ, ϸ鼭 ȸ ڶ ϱ ݴϴ.
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Edition: Paperback: 32 pages
ISBN-10: 0064435105
ISBN-13: 978-0064435109
å ũ : 25.4cm x 22cm
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Book Description
Brief diary entries that mark the passage of the seasons introduce the events in the lives of three wolves as they grow from helpless pups to participants in their small pack's hunt.
Children's Literature
Newbery winner George is a writer who can take the whole of nature and offer up its wonders with enthusiasm and grace. In this book for younger readers, she presents a poetic look at exactly what a wolf pup is like-and is learning-from its day of birth till it is full grown. Part of the book's charm is relating events of nature in the far north to those here at home: pups are born in our more southerly dandelion season; they learn hunting skills when our blueberries are ripe. First-time illustrator Washburn is totally in tune with George's text; her images evoke a marvelous sense of both animals and the barren beauty of the far north.
School Library Journal
George uses a journal approach to illuminate the first 10+ months of life for three wolf pups born to an alpine tundra pack. Each entry in the "diary" is prefaced with a message (in colored inks) to readers/listeners living south of the area telling them how to keep "tundra-time" in the framework of their own seasons. "When you see dandelions turning silver...." "When the yellow warblers return...." "When you are eating fresh blueberries...." Then, George writes, "Look to the north" and in the following paragraph(s), she describes the pups, their gradual development, and their environment. The lyrical text is accompanied by large, realistic acrylic paintings of the adult wolves, the pups, and their habitat along with small cameos of the southern remindersa clump of dandelions, a yellow warbler (the illustrator should consult a Peterson guide), ripe blueberries, etc. The author's research is impeccable, and her affection for her subject evident, affirmed in a personal note. Children will take pleasure in the simply worded narrative and the warm pictures, and will store some accurate wolf data in their memories, as well as take stronger note of their own habitats as they keep an eye out for dandelions, for fresh blueberries on the table, and for Halloween jack-o-lanterns on front porches.Patricia Manning, formerly at Eastchester Public Library, NY
Kirkus Reviews
A charming but sentimental book about the first months in the lives of wolf pups, from birth to young adult. George (There's an Owl in the Shower, 1995, etc.) notes in the introduction that in the "nursing, tumbling, fighting, and growing children of the wild I see all children." The pups—Boulder, Scree, and Talus, play, chase, fight, challenge each other, develop specialties, learn to howl, hunt, and even care for an injured beta wolf. Talus, the smallest pup, rated the bottom of the pack, gains status because of his superior ability to sniff out game. Finally, the three of them wait for the next litter to be born. Children will enjoy the brief text and softly colored drawings of the pups, their parents, and baby-sitter. Washburn, in her first book, has created sweet tableaux of wolves in the wild: purple and lilac landscapes and fluffy, smiling wolves.
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| * ֱ ǰ Ͻ е ٸ |
Sing Down the Moon , ۹ |
Eliza: The Story of Elizabeth Schuyler Hamilton ϵĿ, ۹ |
Orphan Train Rider: One Boys True Story Boston Globe-Horn Book Award , ۹ |
Anno's Counting Book ALA Notable Childrens Book, ۹, ۹ |
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106 |
17 |
2021.12.15 |
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츮 Ƶ ϴ ߾~ |
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134 |
21 |
2010.08.30 |
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134 |
23 |
2009.03.18 |
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- ø ϵǸ 500 ٷ 밡 帳ϴ. [ڼ Ȯϱ]
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