Ivy and Bean: Bound to Be Bad: Ivy & Bean, cartea 05
Autor Annie Barrows Ilustrat de Sophie Blackallen Limba Engleză Hardback – 30 sep 2008 – vârsta de la 8 până la 12 ani
Vezi toate premiile Carte premiată
| Toate formatele și edițiile | Preț | Express |
|---|---|---|
| Hardback (2) | 82.38 lei 3-5 săpt. | |
| Chronicle Books – 30 sep 2008 | 82.38 lei 3-5 săpt. | |
| Chronicle Books – 31 mar 2006 | 84.57 lei 3-5 săpt. |
Din seria Ivy & Bean
- 11%
Preț: 31.34 lei - 10%
Preț: 96.48 lei - 12%
Preț: 66.49 lei -
Preț: 176.69 lei - 11%
Preț: 31.34 lei -
Preț: 86.94 lei - 12%
Preț: 30.90 lei -
Preț: 180.10 lei -
Preț: 180.10 lei - 11%
Preț: 31.34 lei -
Preț: 80.99 lei -
Preț: 36.21 lei -
Preț: 80.42 lei -
Preț: 40.77 lei - 11%
Preț: 31.16 lei - 9%
Preț: 97.94 lei - 11%
Preț: 31.34 lei -
Preț: 84.08 lei - 11%
Preț: 31.34 lei
Preț: 82.38 lei
Nou
Puncte Express: 124
Preț estimativ în valută:
14.58€ • 17.09$ • 12.80£
14.58€ • 17.09$ • 12.80£
Carte disponibilă
Livrare economică 19 ianuarie-02 februarie 26
Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76
Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780811862653
ISBN-10: 0811862658
Pagini: 120
Dimensiuni: 152 x 189 x 16 mm
Greutate: 0.32 kg
Editura: Chronicle Books
Seria Ivy & Bean
ISBN-10: 0811862658
Pagini: 120
Dimensiuni: 152 x 189 x 16 mm
Greutate: 0.32 kg
Editura: Chronicle Books
Seria Ivy & Bean
Notă biografică
Annie Barrows has written many books for adults, but Ivy and Bean is her first series for kids. She lives in Northern California with her husband and two daughters.
Sophie Blackall is an Australian illustrator whose previous books include Ruby's Wish and Meet Wild Boars. She lives in New York.
Sophie Blackall is an Australian illustrator whose previous books include Ruby's Wish and Meet Wild Boars. She lives in New York.
Descriere
The adventures of Ivy and Bean continue. In this fifth book, the girls decide to be so good and kind and pure of thought that wild animals will befriend them. When this doesn't work, they decide that perhaps a little badness can be good. Illustrations.
Recenzii
In the tradition of Betsy and Tacy, Ginnie and Geneva comes two new friends, Ivy and Bean. Ivy has just moved in across the street from Bean, who wants no part of her. She looks dull, always with a book in her hand. Bean, on the other hand, is a sparkplug, full of tricks, especially when they can be pulled on her older sister Nancy. But the day Bean pulls a trick that goes wrong, and Ivy comes to her rescue, a friendship is born. The deliciousness is in the details here, with both girls drawn distinctly and with flair. Ivy, who at first seems a dud has aspirations to be a witch and put charms on people, which is dangerously intriguing to Bean's spunky way of talking and acting (there's a classic moment when she wiggles her fanny at Nancy) and will make readers giggle. Even with all the text's strong points, what takes the book to a higher level is Blackall's artwork, which captures the girls' spirit. A chapter from the second book in the series, to be published in Fall of 2006 will whet readers' appetites for more Ivy and Bean. -"Booklist, starred review
Barrow's debut children's book energetically kicks off a series about two seemingly unlikely pals, just right for kids moving on from beginning readers. Bean's mother suggests that she play with Ivy, the new girl across the street, "She seems like such a nice girl." Seven-year-old Bean says she already has plenty of friends ("Nice, Bean knew, is another word for boring"). After all, Ivy's long, curly red hair is neatly pushed back with a sparkly headband, and she always wears dresses and reads books; headband-, dress- and book-shunning tomboy Bean muses that Ivy "had never once in her whole life climbed a tree and fallen out." But when Ivy offers to get Bean out of a jam with her older sister, Nancy, Bean takes Ivy up on it. Bean discovers that the not-so-boring, wand-toting Ivy is in training to become a witch, and working on a spell that keeps its victim dancing for life--which sets Bean thinking about the ideal fate for bossy Nancy. Blackall's (Ruby's Wish) half-tone spot art and fu
"Readers are bound to embrace this spunky twosome and eagerly anticipate their continuing tales of mischief and mayhem." -"Kirkus Reviews" "With echoes of Beverly Cleary's 'Ramona' series, this easy chapter book will appeal to children who are graduating from beginning readers . . .The characters are appealing, the friendship is well portrayed, ad the pranks and adventures are very much on grade level." -"School Library Journal"
"Annie Barrows accomplishes the almost impossible task of reflecting the world of second grader, creating the tension and drama of family and friendships in language that can be read easily by child who recently graduated from easy readers to early chapter books. " - Lisa Von Drasek, Children's Librarian, Bank Street College of Education
Barrow's debut children's book energetically kicks off a series about two seemingly unlikely pals, just right for kids moving on from beginning readers. Bean's mother suggests that she play with Ivy, the new girl across the street, "She seems like such a nice girl." Seven-year-old Bean says she already has plenty of friends ("Nice, Bean knew, is another word for boring"). After all, Ivy's long, curly red hair is neatly pushed back with a sparkly headband, and she always wears dresses and reads books; headband-, dress- and book-shunning tomboy Bean muses that Ivy "had never once in her whole life climbed a tree and fallen out." But when Ivy offers to get Bean out of a jam with her older sister, Nancy, Bean takes Ivy up on it. Bean discovers that the not-so-boring, wand-toting Ivy is in training to become a witch, and working on a spell that keeps its victim dancing for life--which sets Bean thinking about the ideal fate for bossy Nancy. Blackall's (Ruby's Wish) half-tone spot art and fu
"Readers are bound to embrace this spunky twosome and eagerly anticipate their continuing tales of mischief and mayhem." -"Kirkus Reviews" "With echoes of Beverly Cleary's 'Ramona' series, this easy chapter book will appeal to children who are graduating from beginning readers . . .The characters are appealing, the friendship is well portrayed, ad the pranks and adventures are very much on grade level." -"School Library Journal"
"Annie Barrows accomplishes the almost impossible task of reflecting the world of second grader, creating the tension and drama of family and friendships in language that can be read easily by child who recently graduated from easy readers to early chapter books. " - Lisa Von Drasek, Children's Librarian, Bank Street College of Education
Premii
- Pennsylvania Young Reader's Choice Award Nominee, 2009