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《学校图书馆杂志》(School Library Journal)书评
Gr 1-3-Molly's Grampa, who has just moved in with her family, tells fantastic stories about his adventures living with gorillas, visiting the moon, and wrestling an octopus. His friends include a French-speaking polar bear and the miniature King of England. Molly's parents are afraid Grampa is getting senile until an uproarious birthday party proves his tales are true. Most children will readily identify with Molly, who staunchly believes in her grandfather despite her parents' concerns. Families coping with actual dementia, however, may find the story somewhat disturbing. The book cannot seem to decide if it wants to present a real problem-the sadness families face when an aging relative loses touch with reality-or simply be a rollicking tale in which the oldest and youngest characters outsmart stuffy parents. The silliness of Zimmer's etched paintings adds a great deal to the humorous goings-on. The colors are bright, with pinks, purples, and greens punctuating darker backgrounds. Enjoy the book for its zaniness, but consider the serious undertone when recommending it to readers.æLucinda Snyder Whitehurst, St. Christopher's School, Richmond, VA (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
出版社周刊评论
When her aging Grampa comes to live with Molly and her family, he tells outlandish stories that, to her parents' chagrin, Molly believes wholeheartedly. Tipping his hat to the likes of tall-tale-teller Daniel Pinkwater, actor Arkin's (The Clearing) lengthy narrative is one in which the fantastic is the norm. In this world, sweater-knitting, French-speaking polar bears, moon-men and literate bees populate not only Grampa's amazing tales but, it emerges in the end, reality as well. Yet underlying the humor are concern and fear. Unlike Molly, her parents interpret Grampa's stories as signs that ``his mind is wandering.'' Alzheimer's is suggested (Grampa often gets lost and forgets things). But the ending, which exonerates Grampa in a birthday bash attended by the polar bears et al., dismisses the substance, so that neither the light nor serious aspects of the story seem well served. Zimmer's (The Cow Is Mooing Anyhow) crowded, offbeat art, with its elfin characters and childlike interpretations of Grampa's antics (signed "art by Molly"), goes for the laughs without going over the top. Ages 5-8. (Sept.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
《儿童读物杂志》(Horn Book)书评
When Molly's grandfather comes to live with her family, he tells wildly imaginative stories about his past, and her parents get worried that 'his mind is starting to wander.' Molly believes him, though, and at his birthday party, Grampa gets the last laugh. Zimmer's colorful and familiar pen, ink, and watercolor illustrations complement Arkin's well-written text. Some readers may be concerned about the light-hearted portrayal of memory loss in old age. From HORN BOOK 1995, (c) Copyright 2010. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.