Mr. Stink
فرمت کتاب
ebook
تاریخ انتشار
2010
Lexile Score
730
ATOS
4.7
Interest Level
4-8(MG)
نویسنده
Quentin Blakeناشر
Penguin Group USشابک
9781101477861
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
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نقد و بررسی
AHlovesbooks - Book Review: Mr Stink by David Walliams This book is really stinky, it would smell so much that you would have to put it in the bin, and then bury the bin and get it thrown off the edge of the earth! If you like stinks then Mr. Stink, by David Walliams is the book for you. Mr Stink and Chloe have a great friendship but Chloe has some problems at, home and her mum and dad don't get along with each other. Mr Stink lives on the bench by the side of the road. And Chloe's parents don't know Chloe's talking to Mr Stink! What's going to happen? Chloe invites her friend to have a play date in her shed! How fun will it be? Mr Stink gets covered in mud! GROSS! This book I recommend to boys and girls, and if you like stinky people then that too. There is also a movie. Mr Stink is a great funny book. I hope you enjoy reading Mr. Stink! (Year 5, NZ)
August 30, 2010
Twelve-year-old Chloe does not fit in at her “posh” all-girls school or at home with her withdrawn father, social-climbing mother, and sickeningly perfect sister. Chloe befriends Mr. Stink (a homeless “tramp” named for his powerful smell) and his dog, Duchess, because he appears to be full of stories and to understand being misunderstood (“She wasn’t homeless like him, but she felt homeless in her heart”). Mr. Stink fancies himself a “wanderer,” and his lack of concern with society’s judgments gives Chloe confidence. But when she invites him to move into her shed, she is not prepared for the complications. As in Walliams’s The Boy in the Dress, Blake provides his trademark scrawly artwork; his images are as caricatured as the author’s over-the-top characterizations, particularly Chloe’s mother and Britain’s prime minister, who both try to take advantage of Mr. Stink. Walliams relies heavily on gross-out humor (the references to Mr. Stink’s stench are numerous) and Britishisms, which nearly overwhelm an already heavy-handed theme that everyone has secrets, flaws, idiosyncrasies, and a unique history that is of value. Ages 8–12.
August 1, 2010
A reeking vagrant instills homey togetherness in a family ruled by a domineering mother in this uneven production from the team behind The Boy in the Dress (2009). Sure that Mr. Stink's intriguing combination of gentle, refined speech and eye-watering personal hygiene signals a tragic past (which it actually does, as it turns out), 12-year-old Chloe secretly invites him to move into the shed behind her home. This touches off a series of events that lead to Chloe's pretentious mother becoming a public laughingstock on national television, provide a chance for Chloe to meet and be rude ("stick it up your fat bum!") to the oily Prime Minister and finally induce sudden, radical transformations in both of her parents as well as her villainous little sister just in time for Christmas. Refusing to change himself, Mr. Stink thereupon rambles off into the night. The funny bits, including Blake's occasional spot sketches, are really funny, but the rest of the trite tale comes off as no more than a convenient framework on which to hang them and a set of typecast characters. (Fiction. 10-12)
(COPYRIGHT (2010) KIRKUS REVIEWS/NIELSEN BUSINESS MEDIA, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.)
January 1, 2011
Gr 3-6-A lonely 12-year-old girl and a local tramp hit it off, and thus begins this delightful tale. Perhaps Chloe would not need to turn to Mr. Stink (he bathes once a year) if her overbearing mother accepted her for who she is and did not seem to prefer her sister. Chloe, however, is very good at taking people for who they are. She provides Mr. Stink with shelter, food, and friendship, and in the process unburdens herself to him and learns his secrets. This British import is reminiscent of Roald Dahl's books in its silly, exaggerated storytelling, and while some words may be unfamiliar to American readers and the ending is a bit melodramatic, the characters are appealing, the situations are hilarious, and the plot moves quickly. Blake's charming illustrations appear throughout.-Mariela Siegert, Westfield Middle School, Bloomingdale, IL
Copyright 2011 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
Starred review from November 15, 2010
Grades 4-7 *Starred Review* Not to put too fine a point on it, but Mr. Stink stinks! He was, author Walliams tells us, the stinkiest stinker who ever lived. Why? Well, perhaps its because he is homelessunless you can call the old wooden bench on which he spends all his time a home. No one ever speaks to him until the day that a sweet-natured little girl named Chloe says hello. This sets in motion a series of often hilariously funny events that involve not only Chloe but her politically ambitious mother, her insufferable younger sister, a pompous television host, and even, yes, the prime minister himself (who turns out to be pretty insufferable, too). Walliamsa British comedian-actor-writerhas a gift for crafting memorable scenes and, in the person of Mr. Stink, has created a delightfully offbeat character who may have a secret past. The cheerfully rude tone that informs most of his story takes a sharpand rather jarringturn for the sentimental at the end, but young readers wont care, while readers of all ages will be thrilled by the in-a-word perfect illustrations of the great Quentin Blake (who else could draw a picture of stink?).(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2010, American Library Association.)
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