10 times 10 Counting has never been so much fun!.How many ways can you count to 10? With numbers, fingers, paints? How about with racing cars or with a fairy tale? In fact, you can do it almost any way you like! Hervé Tullet, who has established an international reputation for creating dynamic books for
Title | : | 10 times 10 |
Author | : | |
Rating | : | 4.68 (437 Votes) |
Asin | : | 1849762473 |
Format Type | : | Hardcover |
Number of Pages | : | 128 Pages |
Publish Date | : | 2014-10-21 |
Genre | : |
How many ways can you count to 10? With numbers, fingers, paints? How about with racing cars or with a fairy tale? In fact, you can do it almost any way you like! Hervé Tullet, who has established an international reputation for creating dynamic books for young children, brings us this smart and silly counting book that will teach and entertain in equal measure. Counting has never been so much fun!
Editorial : From School Library Journal K-Gr 2—This sophisticated concept book cleverly illustrates the numbers one through 10 using 10 different categories: "Numbers," "Fingers," "Paints," "Body," "Creation," "Construction," "Games," "Story," "Racing," and "Questions." The first chapter starts with zero while, oddly, none of the others do. In "Fingers," the digits of a human hand illustrate the numbers 11 to 15 and then morph into an undersea plant to show the numbers 16 to 20. Older children may find this amusing, but the transition is subtle and potentially confusing. "Paints" begins with one white line of paint accompanied by the text "One is white." The next page shows a white stripe and a red stripe and the text "Two is red." For "Five is orange," the four previous stripes (white, red, yellow, and blue) ingeniously appear, with the red and yellow ones intersecting to create orange. The four colors continue to intersect to create additional colors. Children may find the text puzzling. T
Shorter than I expected. The content was so vibrant and full of life. Sadly, there is nothing to spy in this book. She was my Pilates teacher, mentor and employer for many years. A scrapbook, of top notch quality, is perhaps a better description.
(More pictures are available on my blog. If you are unacquainted with the craft of plotting, character development, dialog, etc., you will need to fill those gaps in some other way.
Within the scope the book sets for itself, however, it is top notch. The style is informal and the examples used are relevant and exactly illustrate the points being made.
It does not replace fuller guides, such as Ellinor and Gerard's 'Dialogue', but complements them. So many familiar faces and names from my past. The characters come alive for me and they leave me wanting more.. I doggedly kept at it thinking "77" must just be a slow starter or that my mood wasn't right, but after all is said and done, this is one of the worst books I've
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