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* Bank Street Best Children's Book of the Year
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Hardcover: 40 pages
ISBN-10: 0525516832
ISBN-13: 9780525516835
å ũ: 27.3 cm x 22.3 cm
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Book Description
A pair of kids learn what it is really like to be squished together during one hilarious and eventful car ride!
When Max and Molly can't stop complaining about being squished in the back seat of the car, their clever mom knows exactly what to do--offer rides to their animal friends, who are happy to pile in and come along! As the back seat fills up with a wiggly piglet, two flitting ducklings, and three woofing puppies, soon Max and Molly are not only squished--they're SQUISH SQUASH SQUISHED! So when they notice Mom slowing down to wave at Scooter Mooter and his calves, Max and Molly don't say a word--they hush-mush. Thankfully, Mom keeps driving--and after everyone's dropped off and it's time to hustle-bustle home, Max and Molly are happy to stretch out in the back seat of their suddenly gracious-spacious automobile.
The Bulletin of the Center for Childrens Books
Theres a touch of the classic It Could Always Be Worse folktale here, which Rector invigorates with her playful, rhyme-infused prose that rolls right off the readaloud tongue. Pencil and digital art has a tidy jauntiness that echoes Moms mien, and the happy little town populated by a mix of humans and animals (an active lot, judging by the fact the giraffe is jogging and the dogs were out on a bicycle built for four) is a charming venue for all. Audiences may guess that Moms got an ulterior motive from the get-go here, and either way theyll enjoy the giggle-worthy language and moral about comparative--and probably short-term--peace.
School Library Journal
In this uncredited reimagining of the familiar Yiddish tale about a rabbi and the ungrateful resident of a one-room house, famously retold by Margot Zemach in It Could Always Be Worse, two siblings get frustrated being squished in the back seat of their mother's car. Max and Molly complain that being in the backseat is too crowded. Their mother picks up all manner of hitchhikers, from fidgety pigs to a mother dog and puppies. The children soon realize that the more they complain the more animals will be joining them, and settle down. One by one the animals in the backseat are dropped off at their destinations. Max and Molly, with light brown skin and dark hair like their mother, stretch out and revel in their "gracious-spacious" car. This is a humorous nonsensical story about gratitude, told in comic illustrations that make full use of exaggeration. It's odd that the story's origins aren't cited. VERDICT Children who want a modern take on an old story will giggle at the silliness of this version.
Horn Book Magazine
Entertaining update of the classic Yiddish folktale It Could Always Be Worse. . . . The humorous situation, cumulative action, abundance of audience-pleasing animal sounds, and well-earned resolution should make readers glad to go along for the ride.
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* ֱ ǰ Ͻ е ٸ |
What's Your Favorite Animal? Eric Carle and Friends, |
The Adventures of Otto: See Pip Flap Theodor Seuss Geisel Honor , Ready-to-Read, Pre-Level1 |
Harold's Imagination Harold and the Purple Crayon ø 3 պå, ϵĿ, ۹ |
Double the Ducks Mathstart, Level 1, ۹ |
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