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[ å Ұ ]
>> New York Times Best Illustrated Children's Book of 1994
ļ ٷο Mo ġ ÷ Դ Ⱦմϴ. ġ Ӹ Դ ̾. Mo ڽ Ǿ Ծ ġ ߾. ȿ ִ Ͱ б, ǰ, , ̱ ü Ծ ġ ߱, ε, ä Ծ ġϴ....
踦 ǥ߽ϴ, Ծ ġ Ģ ֽϴ.
۹Դϴ.
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Paperback
ISBN : 0786811285
å ũ :
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From Booklist
Ages 5-8. Drescher is an acquired taste for some, but those who like his idiosyncratic artwork will find this to be vintage. The story is this: young Mo dislikes the string beans and cheese souffle‚ his parents serve for dinner, so he turns himself into a warthog monster who eats his mom and dad. That leads to a meal of furniture, the neighbors, his schoolmates, his math teacher, the First Family, and the whole U.S. as the monster changes shape to accommodate his growing belly. All's well that ends well, however--after a little purging and the promise of no more beans and souffle. The pictures feature Mo, who as a boy looks like Pinocchio on LSD; as a monster, he might best be described as frighteningly whimsical. Drescher's art here is as tumultuous as always with clever asides, such as replicas of real stamps as Mo eats his way around the world; the bright, Day-Glo colors of the watercolors and colored pencils add to the feeling of frenzy--but then so does a monster gobbling up every authority figure in sight. Refreshing or repulsive? There seems to be no middle ground when it comes to viewing Drescher's work. Ilene Cooper
From Horn Book
Mo is faced with a dinner consisting of Lizard guts and bullfrog heads-- really string beans and cheese soufflé -- and decides to eat around it. He turns into a green warthog monster and eats his parents; then, turning himself into a succession of larger creatures, eats his way across the country, finally devouring the earth. Drescher's outrageous fantasy is a child's dream, and every detail of the chaotic artwork contributes to the hilarious story.
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- ø ϵǸ 500 ٷ 밡 帳ϴ. [ڼ Ȯϱ]
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