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[ å Ұ ]
"? 䳢?" Ⱓ Ʈ åԴϴ. Ⱓ ū ҷ Ű Ÿ Ƹ Ʈ å , ۺŽ Ŭ "2009 Best Picture Books of the Year" DZ ߽ϴ.
ǥ ̴ Ͼ ϱ? ƴϸ 䳢ϱ? κ θ ̱ ϰ 䳢 ̱ ϳ.
ġ ̱ ϰ 䳢 Ǯ ִ ϰ,
ϴ ̱ ϰ, 䳢 ѱ ٴ ̱ ϰ,
ô ̱ ϰ, 䳢 װ ִ ̱ ϰ...
ڱ ´ٰ ٰ 䳢 Ƹ ٰ ֳ...
ð ٸ ν ϴ å -䳢 ϱ? ̿ ٸ ǰ ϰ, ǰߵ ϴ ڼ ʿϴٴ ݰ ִ Դϴ.
ưư ϵĿåԴϴ.
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Hardcover: 40 pages
ISBN-10: 0811868656
ISBN-13: 978-0811868655
å ũ: 23.5cm x 23.5cm
[ ]
Book Description
From author of Little Pea, Little Hoot, and Little Oink comes a clever take on the age-old optical illusion: is it a duck or a rabbit? Depends on how you look at it. Readers will find more than just Amy Krouse Rosenthal's signature sense of humor here--there is also a subtle lesson for kids who don't know when to let go of an argument. This is a smart, simple story that will make readers of all ages eager to take a side, Duck! Rabbit! makes it easy to agree on at least one thing: reading it again!
From School Library Journal
Two unseen characters debate the identity of the creature at the center of this clever book - is it a duck or a rabbit? Readers will join in the discussion, because the creature could, in fact, be either. Just as each of the debaters begins to see the other's perspective, the duck/rabbit runs away and they see an anteater. Or is it a brachiosaurus? Text and illustrations are intimately wedded in this fun, interactive read-aloud. The bold lines and bright colors in Lichtenheld's illustrations are a visually pleasing match for the bantering text. With a strong, well-executed concept, this book provides an excellent starting point for discussing how points of view can differ and still be right.
From Booklist *Starred Review*
How cute is this? Really, really cute. Some readers may know the visual puzzle that makes the same line drawing look like a rabbit or a duck, depending on how you squint; this book is even funnier (and a little disorienting) if youre meeting Duck/Rabbit for the first time. But even those familiar with how ears can turn into a beak will get a kick out of the way Rosenthal and Lichtenheld move the concept forward. The offstage narrators see something interesting: Hey, look! A duck! Thats not a duck. Thats a rabbit! Then the back and forth begins, with the duck quacking while the rabbit is sniffing, the duck eating bread, the rabbit munching a carrot. In the most clever spread, readers turn the book vertically to see the duck getting a drink of water, while the rabbit cools its ears. The simple art is reminiscent of Eric Rohmanns work and will appeal to the same audience. Despite the story basically being one joke, the clever tone and the amusing pictures (rendered in ink, watercolor, and a wee bit of colored pencil) never let it feel that way. The clever ending might inspire kids (and parents) to create their own artistic twofers.
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