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Trang Nguyen Nguyen من عند 02110 Bohain-en-Vermandois, فرنسا من عند 02110 Bohain-en-Vermandois, فرنسا

قارئ Trang Nguyen Nguyen من عند 02110 Bohain-en-Vermandois, فرنسا

Trang Nguyen Nguyen من عند 02110 Bohain-en-Vermandois, فرنسا

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في بعض الأحيان ، أحب قراءة العلوم الزائفة الصافية بنسبة 100٪. هذا ضرب المكان. لقد حصلت على مكافأة إضافية تتمثل في إعطاء بعض اللمحات على الأسئلة التي طرحها العلماء الحقيقيون في السبعينيات. كتاب ممتاز لقراءة بينما رجم.

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So what we have here is a little board book that's been based on the scene in Disney's Tarzan where the apes and an elephant trash the human campsite. It's been a long time since I saw the movie, but it was indeed one of the more memorable scenes. I'm not really sure where we acquired this book. It's been far too long since we've seen Disney's Tarzan for my wife or I to have noticed it. Likely it was picked up by a family member simply because it was a board book. With Jungle Jam we have a small board book, about 3 inches square. It's small, but sturdy. It has drawings (Peter Emslie, Pencils; Adrienne Brown, Inks)of the animals as they encounter the different items they excitedly use to make their song. The text, written by Ellen Milne, is the name of each of these items. As the book goes on, it adds the sound that an item makes to an ever growing list. This style of listing sounds is something that my daughter, Charlotte, is very much into at the moment. She's been enjoying Dr. Seuss' Hop on Pop and Mr. Brown Can Moo, Can You? quite a bit lately. Very young kids that are fans of Disney's Tarzan might also enjoy this book. For the most part, though, any impressions of this book will depend on how you, or your child, feels about repeating noises over and over, because that's basically what you get here. This isn't as tongue-tying as some Dr. Seuss stuff is, but the book is short enough that (if your child enjoys it) you'll be reading and re-reading it in several sittings. 3/5

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Kit's Wilderness left me with a dark, anxious, and insecure feeling as if I were wandering in a bleak and barren moonlit forest in December. Young Kit Watson moves back to his family's home-town to help care for his grandfather after his grandmother's death. Needing friends, he is drawn to accept an invitation to play the game of "death" by a collection of kids in the town. The game opens his mind to the realm of his dead ancestors who once mined in the town and filling his mind with visitations of creepy, strange ghost-children of the past. Kit supposedly uses his visions of the past and his writing skills to help shape and discover the light in his friend John Askew, but while forcing myself through this book, I never felt like there was actually a plot. Most pages felt like scene descriptions of empty and lonely places. This book just made me feel gloomy and dark. I do not think any young adult would enjoy this book; any awards it has won were clearly bestowed by adults.

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This book is a late spring/summer staple for me -- there are very useful maps, directions, reviews,warnings and useful tidbits for day hiking at any level... and despite the title, it also includes hikes in SW Washington. I'm wistful for a glimpse of some wildflowers, and if you can relate, then get this book, Pacific Northwesterners!