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摘要
The Boris Avenue Beauties Dog Club came to order. Bonnie and Annie Bananie told their friends about the times each of them had been to the hospital. Bonnie announced that since Annie and she had both been hurt, they should form a new club of their own and be the Pain Sisters. Back home, Grandma Gert showed Libby Grandpa Larry's gallstones that she kept in her dresser drawer. In order to become a pain sister, Libby hatches a plan. She just knew she had to become a pain sister, otherwise she'd never be as special as her friends!
评论 (3)
《学校图书馆杂志》(School Library Journal)书评
Gr 2-3-Libby sees herself as a loser because she doesn't have a dog and has never had an operation like her friends Annie Bananie and Bonnie. To impress them, and to become a member of the new club, the Pain Sisters, Libby "borrows" her Grandpa's gall stones (which Grandma has kept in a jar) and loses them. After some anxiety and a lesson learned, they are recovered. The competitive and cliquish characters are not likable, and the dialogue is annoyingly cute. Readers will wonder why Bonnie prefaces every comment with an animal sound since no explanation is given, and Grandma says "Aggh" too many times. Gross-out descriptions may appeal to some children (one character eats his dandruff), but otherwise this is painful for all but the most devoted fans.-Ann Cook, Winter Park Public Library, FL (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
《儿童读物杂志》(Horn Book)书评
Libby feels left out when her best friend, Annie Bananie, forms a club with Bonnie. To qualify for the Pain Sisters club, Libby pretends her grandfather's gallbladder stones (stored in a jar) are her own. Though the plot and premise are stronger than in the previous books, the narrative features the same inane dialogue and weak attempts at humor. From HORN BOOK Fall 1999, (c) Copyright 2010. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
《书目》(Booklist)书评
Gr. 2^-4. This is the fourth in the series about Annie Bananie and her best friend, Libby. Libby is hurt when Bonnie appropriates Annie and names the two of them the Pain Sisters because Bonnie broke her arm and Annie has an appendix scar. Libby decides to pass off her dead grandfather's gallbladder stones as her own to prove she's had an operation, too. But Libby quickly loses the stones and doesn't know how she'll tell her grandmother, who has held on to them for all these years. The premise is silly but fun enough, and Annie Bananie fans will certainly welcome her back. Kids who have not read the other books, however, may be confused by the first chapter, in which Libby and Annie's club sisters lace their conversation with animal sounds. Ink-and-gray-wash illustrations heighten the book's funny parts. --Ilene Cooper