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Book cover of It's My Turn Smudge!
Children's Fiction, Animals

It's My Turn Smudge!

by Miriam Moss, Lynne Chapman (Illustrator), Lynne Chapman
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Synopsis

Sharing can be so hard.especially when you've got a brand-new fishing net to play with! Smudge is having such a wonderful time scooping treasures out of the river--like a water snail, diving beetles, and shrimps--that the tiny mouse just won't give it up. "I want to catch a little silver fish first," she stubbornly tells her frustrated friends, who wait in vain to take their turn. One by one, they drift away, leaving Smudge all alone. And, soon the laughter coming from upstream--the sound of pals playing together and helping each other--makes Smudge realize that sharing is lots more fun. Now, if she can only find a way to make it up to her friends.A charming tale, sweetly illustrated.

School Library Journal

PreS-Gr 2-Two adventures featuring a little mouse in a blue-dotted pinafore. In New House, Stripe the Badger persuades his young friend that it's time to move since their beloved home is too small and the roof leaks. On their walk through the woods they visit an old house that Stripe had seen earlier. It has a garden and a river running by. They set to work painting and scrubbing it and turning it into a country charmer. In the second book, Smudge is catching water snails at the stream to put in her jar before throwing them back. Her friends want a turn, but she is not quite ready to share her net. Before too long, they get tired of waiting and go upstream to join Goose. Smudge realizes that it's just no fun catching things alone, even though she's had a good haul for the day. All's well in the end, however, as she joins her friends upstream where they all play together. The plot lines in these two stories are linear and shallow, and have no particular substance. Done in pencil and watercolor, the pictures have been dappled with texture, softening the overall effect. Unfortunately, the artwork extends inexplicably onto the endpapers. Constance McGeorge's Boomer's Big Day (Chronicle, 1994) is a stronger story that focuses on moving day. For a realistic story with a message about family relationships and moving, try Sally Grindley's A New Room for William (Candlewick, 2000). Nancy Carlson's How to Lose All Your Friends (Viking, 1997) is lots more fun and a better choice for tales dealing with how to be and keep a friend.-Roxanne Burg, Thousand Oaks Library, CA Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.

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Book Details

Published
March 1, 2002
Publisher
Pinwheel
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9781862332874

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