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Big Buck Adventure by Shelley Gill β€” book cover

Big Buck Adventure

by Shelley Gill, Grace Lin (Illustrator), Deborah Tobola
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Overview

A raise in allowance gives a young girl a whole dollar to spend, but what should she buy? The abundance of choices are overwhelming. After solving money math problems and cleverly calculating with coins, the narrator learns that the power of money can lie in preserving its many possibilities.

Rhyming account of a little girl's quandary as she tries to decide what she can get with her dollar in a candy shop, toy store, deli, and pet department.

Synopsis

A raise in allowance gives a young girl a whole dollar to spend, but what should she buy? The abundance of choices are overwhelming. After solving money math problems and cleverly calculating with coins, the narrator learns that the power of money can lie in preserving its many possibilities.

Publishers Weekly

"Saturday morning, I sure am in luck!/ A raise in allowance--I get a buck!" Yes, one dollar is the buck featured in this feeble tale. When her father drops her at a store offering wares ranging from stuffed animals to beef jerky, the young narrator explores her purchasing options, with the aid of clerks whose last names (Cash, Silver, Buck, Penny) are as trite as the book's rhyming verses. Lin's (The Ugly Vegetables) artwork often further complicates some already elaborate scenarios: even though the text, "Four quarters times three equals/ twelve gummy bear treats,/ a much better deal/ than ten at ten cents each," makes no mention of other candies, the illustration introduces candy sticks and gumballs into the mix. All the options throw the would-be consumer into such a tizzy that she, predictably, decides to bank her buck. Without a clear depiction of the addition at work here (and some unrealistic prices to boot) and featuring photos of a dollar bill and coins superimposed on bland, stylized pictures, this thin story offers little adventure. Ages 5-9. (Feb.) Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.|

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

"Saturday morning, I sure am in luck!/ A raise in allowance--I get a buck!" Yes, one dollar is the buck featured in this feeble tale. When her father drops her at a store offering wares ranging from stuffed animals to beef jerky, the young narrator explores her purchasing options, with the aid of clerks whose last names (Cash, Silver, Buck, Penny) are as trite as the book's rhyming verses. Lin's (The Ugly Vegetables) artwork often further complicates some already elaborate scenarios: even though the text, "Four quarters times three equals/ twelve gummy bear treats,/ a much better deal/ than ten at ten cents each," makes no mention of other candies, the illustration introduces candy sticks and gumballs into the mix. All the options throw the would-be consumer into such a tizzy that she, predictably, decides to bank her buck. Without a clear depiction of the addition at work here (and some unrealistic prices to boot) and featuring photos of a dollar bill and coins superimposed on bland, stylized pictures, this thin story offers little adventure. Ages 5-9. (Feb.) Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.|

Book Details

Published
February 1, 2002
Publisher
Charlesbridge Publishing, Inc.
Pages
32
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780881062953

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