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32 pp.
| Simon/Scribner
| October, 2012
|
TradeISBN 978-1-4767-0894-2$16.99
(4)
K-3
Illustrated by
Casey Sorrow.
With very few words, Joyce's confection is more a series of playful feline images than an actual story. Sorrow's simple and elegant drawings create an amusing view of the "absent" cats and help deepen the tale. The book is so spare and old-fashioned in appearance that it seems aimed more at a coterie audience of adult Joyce fans than at children.
40 pp.
| Simon/Scribner
| January, 2004
|
TradeISBN 0-7432-2249-0$$17.95
(4)
K-3
Illustrated by
Pascal Lemaitre.
Nate tells his grandfather, Poppy, that he has a hard time concentrating in school. Poppy then relates, in an overlong cartoon-panel narrative, a tale about saving a snake's life, only to have the snake turn on him. Loosely based on Aesop, Poppy's tale about the virtue of paying attention seems only vaguely relevant to Nate's school dilemma, but the snappy prose and humorous color art are engaging.
32 pp.
| Simon/Scribner
| September, 2003
|
TradeISBN 0-7432-2248-2$$16.95
(4)
K-3
Illustrated by
Pascal Lemaitre
&
Pascal Lemaitre.
Bearing only a casual relationship to Aesop's, this mouse pulls the thorn from the lion's paw--but then begins to fancy himself the king of the animals. Relayed through comic-strip panels illustrated with engagingly goofy animals, the story is riffed in catchy rhyme ("Friends forever? Forever and ever. You won't eat me? Never. No, NEVER"). Ending with a moral more attuned to our times than Aesop's, the story is overlong but ripe for discussion.
40 pp.
| Simon/Scribner
| June, 2003
|
TradeISBN 0-7432-2247-4$$16.95
(3)
K-3
Illustrated by
Pascal LeMaitre.
Handwritten text and panelled cartoon paintings take a hip-hop look at Aesop's fable, jettisoning the old moral in favor of the open ending suggested by the question marks in the title. Kid A and Foxy G both like hanging in the park, but winter gets Kid A back to his chores while Foxy G keeps making his wings sing until they start to crumble in the cold. Should Kid A take his friend in? Readers pulled in by the comic-book format will stay to debate the question.