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Aaron Meshon

Auteur de Take Me Out to the Yakyu

5 oeuvres 248 utilisateurs 32 critiques

Œuvres de Aaron Meshon

Take Me Out to the Yakyu (2013) 152 exemplaires
Tools Rule! (2014) 28 exemplaires
Delivery (2017) 28 exemplaires
The Best Days Are Dog Days (2016) 27 exemplaires
Now That I'm Here (2018) 13 exemplaires

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Take Me Out To The Yakyu is indeed, a home run! This book is filled with affection and edification, and really highlights the global reach of baseball. In Take Me Out To The Yakyu, a little boy gets to see baseball through both Japanese and American perspectives. Filled with wonderful illustrations, and new words to learn (if you're unfamiliar with Japanese), this book knocks it out of the park!
 
Signalé
ryantlaferney87 | 25 autres critiques | Dec 8, 2023 |
An inaccurate depiction of a delivery of cookies. Cute, quirky fun, mostly wordless book.
 
Signalé
potds1011 | 1 autre critique | Mar 5, 2022 |
diverse picture book (in English with a sprinkling of Japanese words; baseball/sports, Japan, grandparents; for preschoolers age 3 and up).
* Prominently features diverse characters: starring a Japanese-American boy (grandpa Ji Ji lives in Japan, grandpa Pop Pop is American and has orange-brown hair on his arms and legs); the stadium crowds are generic/colorless but the baseball players are diverse (a Caucasian pitcher and a black batter on the American team; Japanese players on the Japanese team of course).
* Would work for a baseball- or sports-themed (or multi-cultural?) preschool storytime. The text on each page is pretty short and action-packed, but the overall story is longer so you'll may want to read this one earlier in your circle session, before the kids get too wiggly, and maybe you would skip some pages if your audience is still working on their "sitting quietly" skills.
Some of the story is conveyed through the vibrant and appealing illustrations, so this doesn't work as well for dial-a-story over the phone, but it definitely is good as a read-aloud to one or more kids in person. There is also a glossary in the back (including the Japanese writing for the Japanese words) but it doesn't provide a pronunciation guide, unfortunately.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
reader1009 | 25 autres critiques | Jul 3, 2021 |
This book was pretty cute...a bunch of tools with adorable faces decide that they need to build a shed to keep themselves in so they're not always scattered around in the backyard.

I found it more interesting to read this book if you imagine it takes place in a world where everyday items have gained sentience and killed all the humans, and are now trying to figure out how to manage their new-found independence. The perpetual grins on all the formerly inanimate objects in the backyard becomes much more sinister when you imagine that the inside of the house is covered in blood and dead bodies.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
katebrarian | 1 autre critique | Jul 28, 2020 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
5
Membres
248
Popularité
#92,014
Évaluation
3.9
Critiques
32
ISBN
15

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