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Friendshape
فرمت کتاب
ebook
تاریخ انتشار
2015
Lexile Score
390
Reading Level
1
نویسنده
Tom Lichtenheldناشر
Scholastic Inc.شابک
9780545860451
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی
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June 1, 2015
Rosenthal’s cheerful observations about friendship provide punny setups for longtime teammate Lichtenheld’s (Duck! Rabbit!) visual jokes, all composed with four happily smiling shapes: a blue circle, a yellow square, a red rectangle, and a green triangle. The book is well-suited for an adult and child to work through together as they read each sentence, one per spread, and see where Lichtenheld’s shape play leads. For “Friends make you feel at home,” the triangle sits on top of the square to create a house, while the red rectangle lies in front of it. “We rolled out the red carpet for you!” the square tells the blue circle. Sometimes there’s a rebus to decode, as when the yellow square completes the phrase “Friends play fair and .” “Friends sometimes think the exact same thing at the exact same time” shows each shape thinking about an identical photograph of a banana. It’s upbeat entertainment, and a natural lead-in both to conversations about friendship and to creative activities using cut-out shapes of one’s own. Ages 3–5. Agent: Amy Rennert, Amy Rennert Agency.
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The ups and downs of friendship are explored in a geometric romp. Rosenthal and Lichtenheld (Exclamation Mark, 2013, etc.) rarely disappoint when paired together. From the adorably clever title alone (one hopes the realization of that particular play on words instantly inspired the entire book), readers know they are in for a treat. A simply sketched square, triangle, rectangle, and circle are all friends. They explain why it is good to have pals around. Some of the vignettes are concept-based: the triangle and square form a house, with the rectangle as the red carpet ("Friends make you feel at home"). Others are more literal: an image of the shapes all tilted toward one another is paired with this truism: "Friends are always there for you to lean on." Friendship is not always easy; sometimes quarrels break out (Lichtenheld's thick, black outlines become dented and bumpy). But friends never "stay bent out of shape for long." Chortle. The shapes take turns stacking, turning, and tumbling to portray the many aspects of friendship. But the very best? Friends fill our lives with...a certain word that all four shapes can approximate to spell. Creative minds will delight in figuring it out! Friends come in all shapes, but these four just may be the sweetest. (Picture book. 4-8) COPYRIGHT(1) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
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June 1, 2015
PreS-Gr 2-The reliably inventive Rosenthal and Lichtenheld here reprise their elegant layers of simplicity found in Exclamation Mark (Scholastic, 2013) and Duck! Rabbit! (Chronicle, 2009). Using shapes as personified characters, the text explores axioms about friendship. With expressive eyes and mouths, a digitally colored red rectangle, green triangle, yellow square, and blue circle pose on spreads to illustrate concepts like "Friends make you feel at home." For this, the quartet poses with rectangle as a red carpet, square atop triangle to create a house shape, and circle rolling toward them with a grin. Each axiom in large black print is complemented by the characters' conversations, as when rectangle thanks triangle for his literal support for "Friends are always there for you to lean on." The finale shows them lined up vertically, rectangle-circle-triangle-square, to represent the word love. VERDICT This is a winning introduction to simple shapes and colors as well as a pleasing choice for children who will relate to the emotions and appreciate the visual puns.-Gay Lynn Van Vleck, Henrico County Library, Glen Allen, VA
Copyright 2015 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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September 15, 2015
Preschool-G Clever use of simple shapesa circle, triangle, square, and rectangle, all rendered in muted red, blue, yellow, and greenilluminate the many aspects of friendship in the newest picture book from Rosenthal and Lichtenheld, the dependably skillful team known best for Duck! Rabbit! (2009). The shapes, representing four pals, are lit up by simple eyes and mouths and morph imaginatively into objects like a cheery home composed of the triangle and square. The rectangle acts as a red carpet laid out for the circle, making the point that Friends make you feel at home. In another spread announcing that Friends know how to make their own fun, the rectangle balances on the triangle to form a teeter-totter that the circle and square enjoy. On other pages, all the shapes form a smiley face and spell out the word love. Playful and pleasant, with a softly sunny background and emphatic bold type, the book asks little readers to look closely at composition, while delivering its simple message. Sure to be a hit. HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: Rosenthal and Lichtenheld always churn out successes. Expect this to be no different.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2015, American Library Association.)
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