
基本信息出版社:CARTWHEEL BOOKS
页码:32 页
出版日期:2006年10月
ISBN:0439793041
条形码:9780439793049
装帧:精装
正文语种:英语
外文书名:山姆的冬帽
内容简介 "It's a new blue woolly hat!" said Sam. "I'm going to keep it forever!" Sam Bear is prone to losing things when he goes out to play. When he loses his red winter coat, his best friend Billy brings it back. When Sam loses his green fuzzy mittens, Papa Bear finds them. Then a package from Grandma arrives--with a new woolly hat inside! Sam can't wait to show Billy. But when Sam loses his new winter hat, his whole life goes wobbly! Where is the hat that Grandma made him? Parents and kids will adore this quiet story of childhood fun.
编辑推荐 From School Library Journal
PreS–Sam is absentminded. While outside playing, the little cub removes his coat. Just as his mother discovers that it is missing, his friend returns it. The next day, the bear takes off his mittens to fix his bike and returns home without them. Just then his father comes home bearing the mittens, found in the garage. Then Sam loses the hat his Grandma sent. Struggling to remember where it could be, he topples over and looks up to find it stuck on a tree branch above the fence he just climbed. The simple story contains minimal action, but children will relate to Sam's forgetfulness. McPhail's detailed and textured watercolor and pen-and-ink illustrations create a warm and welcoming feeling. The book will work best with one-on-one guided reading, but it can also be used as a dialogic reading exercise.–Linda Zeilstra Sawyer, Skokie Public Library, IL
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
From Booklist
McPhail's signature style is evident in the soft, warm watercolors that illustrate this cozy easy-reader about friendship and family. Sam Bear has lots of uproarious play with his next-door neighbor and best friend, Billy. Their favorite game is riding tricycles and bumping into one another. But during the fun, Sam loses his red winter coat. Billy finds it and brings it back. Next Sam loses his green mittens. Papa finds them and returns them, but then Sam loses the blue woolly hat that Grandma made him. He and Billy find that together: "Lucky us!" says Sam, smiling. Words and pictures will appeal to preschoolers, who can learn their colors as they enjoy the story of small mistakes and affection. Link this with its opposite, Barbara Bottner and Geral Kruglik's Pish and Posh Wish for Fairy Wings (reviewed on p.50), in which the child can't do anything right. Hazel Rochman
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
专业书评 From School Library Journal
PreS–Sam is absentminded. While outside playing, the little cub removes his coat. Just as his mother discovers that it is missing, his friend returns it. The next day, the bear takes off his mittens to fix his bike and returns home without them. Just then his father comes home bearing the mittens, found in the garage. Then Sam loses the hat his Grandma sent. Struggling to remember where it could be, he topples over and looks up to find it stuck on a tree branch above the fence he just climbed. The simple story contains minimal action, but children will relate to Sam's forgetfulness. McPhail's detailed and textured watercolor and pen-and-ink illustrations create a warm and welcoming feeling. The book will work best with one-on-one guided reading, but it can also be used as a dialogic reading exercise.–Linda Zeilstra Sawyer, Skokie Public Library, IL
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
From Booklist
McPhail's signature style is evident in the soft, warm watercolors that illustrate this cozy easy-reader about friendship and family. Sam Bear has lots of uproarious play with his next-door neighbor and best friend, Billy. Their favorite game is riding tricycles and bumping into one another. But during the fun, Sam loses his red winter coat. Billy finds it and brings it back. Next Sam loses his green mittens. Papa finds them and returns them, but then Sam loses the blue woolly hat that Grandma made him. He and Billy find that together: "Lucky us!" says Sam, smiling. Words and pictures will appeal to preschoolers, who can learn their colors as they enjoy the story of small mistakes and affection. Link this with its opposite, Barbara Bottner and Geral Kruglik's Pish and Posh Wish for Fairy Wings (reviewed on p.50), in which the child can't do anything right. Hazel Rochman
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved