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     ǰ  Exclamation Mark (ϵĿ, ۹) (ǰ)

  å:Exclamation Mark (ϵĿ, ۹) (ǰ)
  :Amy Krouse Rosenthal (Author), Tom Lichtenheld (Illustrator)
  ǻ : Scholastic Press
  :56
  ISBN:9780545436793
   : NO
  Һڰ:21,600
  ǸŰ:ݹ
  :0
   : 忬 - , ġ, ʵб г (5~10)
   :

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* A New York Times Best Seller!
* IndieBound Bestseller!
* 2015 Grand Canyon Reader Award
* Bank Street Books Best Book of the Year
* 2015 California Young Reader Medal winner
* Kirkus Reviews Best Children's Books of the Year
* Newsday Top 10 Children's Books of 2013
* Parents' Choice Spring 2013 Picture Books Silver Honor
* A Junior Library Guild selection
* School Library Journal, Best Books of the Year
* Colorado Childrens Book Award, 2014 nominee
* Virginia Readers' Choice Award, 2014-15 nominee
* Bank Street College of Education 2014 Best Books of the Year for Children and Young Adult
* Selected for Notable Social Studies Trade Books for Young People 2014
* Master List, 2013 Capitol Choices Noteworthy Titles for Children and Teens
* 2014 Maine Chickadee Book Award Nominee
* Pick of the Day by the School Library Journal
* Fresh Picks for Little Readers from Daily Candy


Ʈ ׸å "Duck! Rabbit!(? 䳢!)" Բ Amy Krouse Rosenthal(), Tom Lichtenheld(׸) 2 ְ α ۰ ٽ Ʈ ׸åԴϴ. "ǥ" ⰣǾϴ.

å ϷƮ̼ ' ȣ' ȰϿϴ. ħǥ, ǥ, ǥ ̾߱⸦ ̲ϴ. ȣ ȭϿ ġ ó ̸ ħǥ ǥ, ǥ Ȳ ǥ ǥ, ǥ, ǥ ñ ϴ ǥ鵵 ̰ ŭ Ĩϴ.

忡 ϰ Ǵ ħǥ ̿ ʹ ٸ ǥ!
ǥ ڽŸ ٸ ϰ ִ, ׸ ڽ ϴ ڽ ü ؼ ϱ ߽ϴ.

׷ ǥ ǥ ˴ϴ. ǥ ǥ ۺױ ϰ, ǥ "Stop!"ϰ Ҹ ϴ. ׸ ӿ ڽ ִ ߰. ǥ ׷ ǥ ٽ ѹ ޶ Źϰ, ڽŰ ǥ ϴ ׸ Ҹ "Hi!" "Howdy!" λ縦 dz׳׿. ׷ ڽ ߰ϰ "Wow!" źϰ ǥ ɼ 谡 ݰ ˴ϴ.

Yipee!
This is fun!
Way to go!
Bravo!
You're it!
Cool!
Yum!
That's great!
Thanks!
Home run!
Congraturations!
Happy Birthday!
Go!
Encore!
Look out!
Wake up!
Boo!

ڽŵ 忡 ߿ Ѵٴ ݰ ǥ ħǥ ģ鿡 ޷ ҽ ˷ݴϴ. ħǥ ǥ ģκ ް ǥ å ڽ ϳ׿. "The end!"

ưư ϵĿåԴϴ.



[]



[ ]

Hardcover: 56 pages
ISBN-10: 0545436796
ISBN-13: 978-0545436793
å ũ: 18.5 cm x 28.8 cm



[ ]

Book Description
From the bestselling creators of Duck! Rabbit!, an exciting tale of self-discovery!

He stood out here.
He stood out there.
He tried everything to be more like them.

It's not easy being seen. Especially when you're NOT like everyone else. Especially when what sets you apart is YOU.
Sometimes we squish ourselves to fit in. We shrink. Twist. Bend. Until -- ! -- a friend shows the way to endless possibilities.
In this bold and highly visual book, an emphatic but misplaced exclamation point learns that being different can be very exciting! Period.


Booklist *Starred Review*
From the dynamic team that brought you Duck! Rabbit! (2009) comes this introduction to the most exuberant punctuation mark of all: the exclamation point. At first, !, a round circle with a face, doesnt like standing out in a crowd; in a line-up of seven smiling faces, which look like period marks, hes the only one with a line above his head. ! tries clever ways to fit in (flipping himself upside down, thereby squashing his tail) and even thinks about running away, until he meets a formidable force: the question mark. After a barrage of questions from ? (Do you like frogs? Can you hula-hoop?), ! finds his voice and tells him to STOP! From there, !s confidence begins to grow and, soon, theres no stopping his unbridled joy. The spare, clever illustrations - all round, black-outlined punctuation marks with faces - are set on the kind of thick-lined paper kindergarteners use, and the overall design effect is lovely. The text is similarly simple, but a change in the size and color of the font signifies important moments. With the celebrating-your-strengths angle, fun grammar lesson, and many classroom tie-in possibilities, this picture book deserves a !!!. Grades K-3, --Ann Kelley


Kirkus *Starred Review*
"Punctuation with pizzazz.
How does an exclamation mark learn his purpose? Pre-readers and readers alike will giggle and cheer to see the process. The setting is a warm yellowish beige background with a faint pulpy pattern and repeating horizontal lines with dotted lines halfway between them - penmanship paper. Each bold, black punctuation mark has a minimalist yet expressive face inside its circular dot. He stood out, explains the first page, as the titular protagonist looks on doubtfully. He tries hanging around with periods, but squishing his extension down into a spring doesnt really work; even prostrate, he just wasnt like everyone else. Period. (Hee! Rosenthal gleefully puns instead of naming any punctuation.) Mournful, confused, flummoxed, and deflated, the exclamation marks line tangles and flops. Then someone unexpected arrives. Hello? Who are you? queries the newbie, jovially pummeling the exclamation mark with 17 manic inquiries at once. Stop! screams the exclamation mark in enormous, bumpy-edged letters - and theres his identity! The outbursts anxious vibe dissipates immediately (and the question mark is undaunted by being yelled at). Finally, the protagonist has [broken] free from a life sentence. Snapping up usages that match his newfound personality, he zooms back to show the other punctuation marks. The zippy relationship between exclamation mark and question mark continues beyond the acknowledgements page."


School Library Journal *Starred Review*
"Through a perfect pairing of clever design and tongue-in-cheek humor, Rosenthal and Lichtenheld effectively demonstrate the function of the exclamation mark (as well as the period and question mark) in this tale about a depressed punctuation mark that just doesnt fit in. On an unadorned backdrop of lined paper, several periods and one exclamation mark are lined up in a row. Clearly, he stands out in a crowd. Like Elmer in David McKees classic tale, the exclamation mark struggles with his difference and tries to blend in. When the downcast punctuation meets a question mark who overwhelms him with inquiries, our hero finally finds his voice and tells the other to Stop! From there, he builds his confidence in making declarative statements and leaves the group to make his mark. Rosenthal shines in her play on words (It was like he broke free from a life sentence). Lichtenhelds minimalist style is deceivingly simple; a curlicue or crumpled line, combined with an amazingly impressive circle with eyes and a mouth, is all thats needed to convey emotion when the exclamation mark is confused, flummoxed, and deflated. This fun-to-read tale will find a ready home in language-arts lessons, reminding burgeoning elementary-age writers which punctuation personality belongs in which type of sentence-without the tedium that accompanies traditional grammar lessons. This one is a must-have!!!
* ֱ ǰ Ͻ е ٸ

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Ÿ ֿ׸å, ϵĿ, ۹

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Caldecott , ۹, ۹
 

190130 ۾ 
̸ ȸ õ ۼ
Amy Krouse Rosenthal׸å HϿ콺 145 22 2019.02.09
- ø ϵǸ 500 ٷ 밡 帳ϴ. [ڼ Ȯϱ]

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