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(3)
4-6
Illustrated by
Dan Burgess.
While hospitalized with tuberculosis during World War II, Emmaline gets caught up in a quest involving winged horses that she believes only she can see. Letters from a mysterious Horse Lord guide her as her illness worsens. Accompanied by occasional full-page black-and-white silhouette illustrations, this atmospheric tale leaves readers to decide for themselves: does Emmaline die or does she live?
40 pp.
| Holt/Ottaviano
| November, 2011
|
TradeISBN 978-0-8050-8884-7$14.99
(3)
PS
Illustrated by
Carrie Eko-Burgess.
A construction crew knocks down a building, then builds a new house from the ground up. In a rhyming text that reads like one big cheer for all things construction, each spread introduces the next vehicle or tool used in the process. The vibrant digital art will captivate young truck fanatics, and the recurring "What do we need?" chant is irresistible.
203 pp.
| Dutton
| October, 2009
|
TradeISBN 978-0-525-42160-3$19.99
(4)
1-3
Illustrated by
Mark Burgess.
Christopher Robin returns to commune with Pooh, Piglet, Eeyore, and the others (including new otter pal Lottie). The friends have several episodic adventures, told in chapters that tend to be a little long (this-side-of-the-pond readers may get a little squirmy, especially during the extended cricket sequence). Nevertheless, the writing and full-color spot illustrations ably mimic Milne and Shepard, respectively.