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New York Times Best Illustrated Children's Book I Stink ؼ I'm Mighty!, I'm Bad!, I'm Dirty! ټ Ʈ å Բ McMullan κΰ ٽ ̷ 2012 ֽԴϴ.
ڵ ٶ ȭĭ ̱ ο α մϴ. 縷 ʿ ̱ Ⱦϴ ӳ ...
پ ȭĭ ȭ ư ϴ.
ٴ Flatcar 縦,
ȭĭ Gondola ,
ȭ ִ Coilcar ö,
Tankcar ֹ,
V · Hopper ,
õĭ ̽ũ,
ڽī ĵ,
3 ䷢ ڵ Ʈ ư ϴ.
ȭ ڵ , ͳ ڵ ұ ξ հŸ մϴ. ִ ξ . ϰ ߽ϴٸ, ödzθ ڵ ߸ ϴ ٶ ᱹ ̰ϴ.
ο η ư ð. ̹ ڵ ָ Ϸ մϴٸ, ̵ ִٰ ϳ...
Jim McMullan Ư ̸鼭 ȭdz پ Ǽ ȭ ̷ , Ư پ ũ · Ȱڵ ð ȿ ݴϴ.
ϰ 鼭 ִ Ŀٶ ưư ϵĿԴϴ.
[ ]
Edition: Hardcover: 40 pages
ISBN-10: 0061920851
ISBN-13: 978-0061920851
å ũ : 28.7cm x 23.5cm
[ ]
Book Description
Can a train pullin half a mile of heavy-duty freight cars make it to Chicago ahead of a speedy little race car?
Through the desert . . .
Through the mountains . . .
Through a blizzard . . .
Vvvrrrrrrrrrrrrrrum!
Chooka Chooka Chooka Chooka
The race is on!
Booklist
With a Vrrrrrrrrrrrrrrum, a red sports car challenges a train engine to a race. But first the train loads lumber on the flatcar, bricks in the gondola, steel on the coil car, gas in the tank car, and gravel in the hopper. Once the engine builds up speed, there is no stopping him. He takes tunnels through mountains and warns cows off the track. Even city traffic (including the red car) halts while he chugs to his destination. The mighty engine politely offers the sports car a ride back. On the checkerboard endpapers and throughout the story, the engine is Mr. Personality: big, confident, and friendly. The text moves along in a satisfying way, though interruptions can be expected, as kids stop the action to identify the cars and their contents again and again. Featuring big, bold images, the artwork creates a strong thrust from left to right in nearly every scene while adding plenty of variation and visual interest along the way. Train fans will love this.
Children's Literature
From the duo that gave us I Stink (2002) and I'm Big (2010) comes this rhythmic challenge between a mighty train engine and a sporty red car. Red dares the engine to a race from Sacramento to Chicago and the grinning competitors line up at the starting line. But first the engine moves about the yard to secure his load of flatcars, gondolas, tank cars, gravel bins and refrigerator cars. Then it is ready, set and they're off. Full speed ahead the train charges through a tunnel while the little red car must navigate the twists and turns of the mountain road. Snow is no problem for the train to plow through as he eats up the track with a chooka chooka chooka and the car struggles to keep up with a vrrum-rum. The car is no match for the super-fast engine that easily slides into Chicago the winner. In a chivalrous act he offers Red Car a ride back home on his special auto-hauling car. For those who fondly remember Donald Crew's classic Fright Train (Greenwillow, 1978) this will make a perfect pairing. The energetic rhythms of the friendly competition will readily draw readers in with onomatopoetic words dropped in for added emphasis and fun. The liveliness of the illustrations capture the zip and zing of the text and readers will be cheering for their favorite right to the end. When they get to the end they will want to read it again and again. Another successful collaboration.
The Horn Book
The staccato text is as peppy as always and embellished with onomatopoeia like the chooka chooka chooka rhythm the train makes once up and running. Jim McMullan makes terrific use of the broad horizontal spreads to show the beauty and challenge of the journey.
School Library Journal
Certain to pique the interest and imagination of young children as to the everyday workings of freight trains - and it takes them on a highly entertaining ride, too.
Publishers Weekly
Its a rip-roaring ride.
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* ֱ ǰ Ͻ е ٸ |
The Movable Mother Goose Robert Sabuda ˾, ϵĿ, ۹ |
Faithful Elephants ۹, ۹ |
Little Thor Gets Mad , ۹ |
Stone Soup Caldecott , ۹ |
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