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When Tom, a young panda, goes to his very first day of kindergarten, his whole family stays and plays and wishes they could be in kindergarten too. Full color.
评论 (4)
《学校图书馆杂志》(School Library Journal)书评
PreS-Gr 2-Tom can't wait to join the cubs building spaceships and making monsters in kindergarten. When the big day arrives, however, the young panda suddenly finds he doesn't want his parents and Baby to leave him, and his understanding teacher, Mrs. Polar Bear, invites the whole family to spend the day. Tom's parents have such fun playing dress-up, painting pictures, singing "I'm a Little Teapot," and listening to stories that they arrive early the next morning and plan to stay. Mrs. Polar Bear pointedly asks, "Don't you have to go to work?" Sadly they do, but they manage to find ways to carry a little kindergarten excitement into their daily routines. Large, bright, whimsical watercolors make this a perfect book both for group storytelling and for one-on-one sharing. Readers will enjoy discovering the many humorous details, like the bottle of "Hienz Bamboo Sauce" in the pandas' kitchen and Baby's stuffed toy-not a teddy bear, but a human child. A happy, exuberant addition to any picture-book collection.-Ginny Gustin, Sonoma County Library System, Santa Rosa, CA (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
出版社周刊评论
Legge's (Bamboozled) fun-filled watercolors are as infectious as Australian author Wild's lively tale of a young panda's first day of school. Tom's parents are always too busy working to play monsters or astronauts with him. But on the first day of kindergarten, when Tom won't let go of his parents' legs and his teacher invites his parents and Baby to stay and play, they join right in. They listen to a story, play dress up, paint pictures and build castles in the sandbox. By day two, Tom is ready to be independent, but his parents want to stay. As Tom's mother reluctantly goes home to wash the windows and weed the garden, and his father heads to the office to "sign a lot of papers," even Tom feels sorry for them. Illustrations of the papa panda wearing a newspaper hat and a fish tie while dancing a sailor's hornpipe in his office will tickle youngsters' funny bones, as will Legge's inspired portrayal of the grown panda bears enthusiastically singing "I'm a little teapot short and stout." This humorous story about adults rediscovering the satisfaction of creative play will likely allay any anxieties children may have about starting kindergarten. Ages 4-6. (Apr.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
《儿童读物杂志》(Horn Book)书评
In this delightful twist on the first-day-of-school story, Tom the panda is frightened of starting kindergarten, so Mother and Father stay with him. After a wonderful time, not only Tom, but Mother and Father as well, all want to go back the next day. The anthropomorphic body language and endearing childlike expressions of the adult pandas in the lively illustrations are convincing. From HORN BOOK Fall 2000, (c) Copyright 2010. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
《书目》(Booklist)书评
Ages 4^-6. It's common for children (and parents) to experience separation anxiety on the first day of kindergarten--but not quite like this. It's Mr. and Mrs. Panda who don't want to leave when they are allowed to spend the day with little Tom on his first day of school. Finally, Tom's teacher convinces the Pandas to return to their grown-up lives, which now include time for play, thanks to innately imaginative Tom and the ideas he brings home from kindergarten. Legge's panda family is comfortably cuddly and plump, with expressive faces that radiate the joy of simple childhood games. The family is also a modern, nuclear one: Mother takes care of the house and children, but Father cooks dinner and seems to do his share of the housework. Kindergarteners will squeal at the sight of parents singing "I'm a little teapot," bursting out of child-size dress-up clothes, and playing in the sandbox, and the adults who read the story will appreciate the subtle message that there's a place in every life for fun and fantasy. --Catherine Andronik