The Red Lemon

The Red Lemon
افزودن به بوکمارک اشتراک گذاری 0 دیدگاه کاربران 5 (1)

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

فرمت کتاب

ebook

تاریخ انتشار

2014

Reading Level

0-1

ATOS

2.3

Interest Level

K-3(LG)

نویسنده

Bob Staake

شابک

9780307497529
  • اطلاعات
  • نقد و بررسی
  • دیدگاه کاربران
در این داستان تامل برانگیز که یاداور سوس است, دهقان مکفی در باغ خود لیمو سرخ پیدا میکند و فریاد میزند, «این قرمز است به عنوان یک علامت توقف! مثل گل سرخ است! من نمیتونم لیمو قرمز داشته باشم جایی که میوه زرد رشد میکنه دنیایی را تصور کنید که لیموناد قرمز باشد؟ که کیک فنجونی های یکبار زرد به جای ان قرمز هستند؟ " او با کوبیدن لیمو سرخ بر سطح اب، نمی تواند تصور کند که روزی ان را در جزیره ای کوچک به زمین بنشاند، بذر بپاشد، و روزی باغ درختان لیمو را بیاورد. جایی که مردم از همه جای دنیا به انجا سفر می کنند تا لیمو های قرمز را امتحان کنند «شش برابر شیرین است! "

نقد و بررسی

Publisher's Weekly

September 11, 2006
A perfectly rotund farmer sings the praises of his latest lemon crop: "There's nothing like lemons./ This fruit isn't mellow./ They're tangy!/ They're tasty!/ They're tart\x97/ and soooooo/ yellow!" In these pages, Saake's (Hello, Robots ) retro-style graphics exude giddy happiness: Farmer McPhee bounces about his orchard in a state of exhilaration. In his comically manic reveries, he imagines all the delicious things his lemons will be used to make. ("Lemons for sherbet and lemons for pie!/ Lemons for drinks on the Fourth of July!") Children should get a kick out of seeing how Saake manipulates simple shapes into cool, cartoon-like images. But the story takes a darker turn when McPhee spies something shocking in one of his trees: a single red lemon. "I can't have red lemons/ where yellow fruit grows!" fumes McPhee, as Staake covers the scene with a wash of smoldering red. He hurls the red fruit into the ocean, where it lands on a deserted island, germinates and, after a few centuries (the passage of time is symbolized by a vaguely disturbing, post-apocalyptic-looking view of the orchard), the produce from the red lemon orchard becomes a sought-after gastronomic treat. One man's lemon is another's lemonade? The moral may pass over youngsters' heads, but the pictures will keep them enthralled. Ages 4-8.



Publisher's Weekly

October 9, 2006
A perfectly rotund farmer sings the praises of his latest lemon crop: "There's nothing like lemons./ This fruit isn't mellow./ They're tangy!/ They're tasty!/ They're tart—/ and soooooo/ yellow!" In these pages, Saake's (Hello, Robots
) retro-style graphics exude giddy happiness: Farmer McPhee bounces about his orchard in a state of exhilaration. In his comically manic reveries, he imagines all the delicious things his lemons will be used to make. ("Lemons for sherbet and lemons for pie!/ Lemons for drinks on the Fourth of July!") Children should get a kick out of seeing how Saake manipulates simple shapes into cool, cartoon-like images. But the story takes a darker turn when McPhee spies something shocking in one of his trees: a single red lemon. "I can't have red lemons/ where yellow fruit grows!" fumes McPhee, as Staake covers the scene with a wash of smoldering red. He hurls the red fruit into the ocean, where it lands on a deserted island, germinates and, after a few centuries (the passage of time is symbolized by a vaguely disturbing, post-apocalyptic-looking view of the orchard), the produce from the red lemon orchard becomes a sought-after gastronomic treat. One man's lemon is another's lemonade? The moral may pass over youngsters' heads, but the pictures will keep them enthralled. Ages 4-8.



School Library Journal

September 1, 2006
PreS-Gr 1 -Farmer McPhee delights in his grove of lemon trees. Each perfect lemon is tasty, tart, and, most importantly, yellow. His pride fairly bursts off the page, as does his outrage when he discovers a red lemon on one of his trees. He cannot imagine a world in which lemonade is red and cupcakes are crimson. In a fit of anger, he hurls the offending fruit across the sea to a distant island. Two hundred years pass and McPhee -s prized lemon tree groves are replaced by weeds. But on the island, a vibrant city has grown up around a grove of red lemon trees. As it turns out, these lemons are six times sweeter than yellow ones, and now people travel across oceans and seas to get them. Bold, enticing illustrations dominate the pages. Staake creates a fun, dynamic world reminiscent of Dr. Seuss -s in its sweeping arcs, bright colors, multicolored cartoon people, and effortlessly rhyming text. The circles used to create Farmer McPhee and his trees give the book a polished, graphic-arts feel. Pair this tangy tale with Laura Vaccaro Seeger -s "Lemons Are Not Red" (Roaring Brook, 2004) for a refreshing storytime combination." -Suzanne Myers Harold, Multnomah County Library System, Portland, OR"

Copyright 2006 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.




دیدگاه کاربران

دیدگاه خود را بنویسید
|