Jackalope

Jackalope
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مشارکت: عنوان و توضیح کوتاه هر کتاب را ترجمه کنید این ترجمه بعد از تایید با نام شما در سایت نمایش داده خواهد شد.
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فرمت کتاب

audiobook

تاریخ انتشار

2009

Lexile Score

520

Reading Level

1-3

نویسنده

Tom Stechschulte

شابک

9781440716973
  • اطلاعات
  • نقد و بررسی
  • دیدگاه کاربران
داستان‌سرایی و نثر‌های جادویی در شغال‌پاپ به زندگی باز می‌گردد، داستان غم‌انگیز خرگوش کوچکی که به ارزویش برای شاخ‌های غول‌اسا دست می‌یابد. شغال‌ها که فقط می‌خواهند درنده‌خو باشند، روی شاخ‌هایی که موجب دردسر می‌شوند حساب نمی‌کنند. این کتاب جدید توسط خواهران و نویسندگان برنده جایزه، جانت استیونز و سوزان استیونز کرومل شادی و سرگرم کردن مخاطبان جوان است.

نقد و بررسی

AudioFile Magazine
Hold on to your "listening ears" and get ready for tall tale humor abounding with gardening puns. Unhappy with his ordinary self, Jack asks his fairy god-rabbit for horns. Jack cannot resist a fib, Coyote cannot resist a waiting meal, and Fairy God-rabbit cannot quite master her spells. Tom Stechschulte narrates with the deadpan twang of a Western storyteller. Elongating words and phrases, he heightens the fun of the preposterous situations that envelop Jackalope. He is a ditzy god-rabbit, a conniving villain, and a reformed hero all wrapped into one. Do not miss the alternative endings and the explanatory coda! A.R. (c) AudioFile 2004, Portland, Maine

Publisher's Weekly

January 13, 2003
This team's (And the Dish Ran Away with the Spoon) new fable features a multi-layered story line, kinetic art and a lot of sass. A shambling armadillo in oversize cowboy gear hosts the tale ("Ever seen a jackalope?") and offers down-home moralizing in the margins ("Why, don't you be wishing for something you're not—/ It's better to be who you are!"), while the figure of Jack provides a foolish counterpoint to the armadillo's knowing voice. Jack wants to be scary, and he doesn't care whose toes he steps on in order to be feared. His Fairy Godrabbit brings him horns to make him fearsome, but the two of them must escape hungry Coyote before they can live happily ever after. After what looks like a clever escape, the slow-talking armadillo discloses, Coyote devours Jack and Jill and all the rest of the characters—and there the villain sits on the opposite page, relaxing post-meal in a lawn chair, picking his teeth with one of Jack's antlers. "The end," the armadillo says. It's a startling moment, until—"Ha! Just kidding," says the armadillo on the next page. Stevens's colored-pencil spreads and spot illustrations build momentum and hold many surprises. The double ending, the puns and the artwork will be enjoyed by all ages. Ages 5-8.




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