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A Halloween witch with her magic broom zooms all over her house, and all through the night sky in this seasonal board book from author/illustrator Charles Reasoner, before returning home to snooze. Fortunately for her, her broom tidies up her messy house, while she takes to her chair to nap...

One of four die-cut board books Reasoner created in 2014 for a Halloween collection—other titles include Boo Bat, Halloween Ghost and Mr. BonesMagic Broom is a short, simple book for the youngest children. The rhyming text can be read aloud to infants and toddlers, who can follow along with the bright, colorful artwork, and who can be trusted to touch and turn the chunky board pages.
 
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AbigailAdams26 | Nov 12, 2023 |
Mx and Ms mildly enjoy. M&D didn't like this, so donated it.
 
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Mx2018 | Jun 5, 2023 |
A cute boardbook about ocean animals.
 
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book_lady15 | Apr 3, 2020 |
Cute story. Cute pics. Short and sweet Halloween book for children.
 
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PaulaLT | Oct 2, 2019 |
This is a fun book for Halloween. It has different pop ups and features in the book. It is a touch and feel book. I would us in early elementary.
 
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Devin_Woodall | May 1, 2017 |
10 months - another good signing book for numbers and animals
 
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maddiemoof | Oct 20, 2015 |
10 months - I would like to hope there are some healthier choices for some of these food colors. However it's a relatively good book for learning color and food signs.
 
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maddiemoof | Oct 20, 2015 |
"No matter how many times you stumble and fall,
Just pick yourself up and get back on that wall!" Great story to show kids that no matter how many times you fall you have to get up and try again.
 
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tzarate | Apr 24, 2014 |
This is a nice little book for an introduction to the basic concept of opposties. Opposites such as big/little, soft/hard, in/out, and front/back are covered. Each pair of opposites is paired with images. The images are things familiar to baby, such as toys. The pages of this board book are very thick. There are also only 8 pages. Though toddler may enjoy this book, the target audience would be those 0-2. Some of the choices for images in this book were odd. For example, for in/out, toys are shown as put away in a container for IN and stacked for OUT. That may not be the clearest way to demonstrate that concept to a small child.
 
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foraclass | Feb 25, 2014 |
Peek-A-Boo Monsters by Charles Reasoner

My rating: 3 of 5 stars

Peek-A-Boo Monsters by Charles Reasoner is a children's board book that gives you peek-a-boo images of various cute monsters that reveal each monster through a cut-out and then you turn the page and get the whole monster. This is a very cute and colorful book that young children will find very visually engaging.
 
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Lisa.Hines | Jun 16, 2013 |
Colors and numbers--two concepts in one book.
 
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Sullywriter | Apr 3, 2013 |
This is a silly adaptation of the book where an old lady swallows a series of strange things to get rid of the fly that was the original problem. There is rhyming, sillyness, and repition throughout the book making it a great read aloud for the students to be a part of. I would use it in my classroom with a key board and have the students be responsible for a certain phrase that is repeated throughout the entire book.
 
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kaylada3 | Feb 28, 2011 |
While sitting in the woods near his house, a young boy envisions the various types of dwellings that serve as homes for animals.
A lodge of twigs is a beaver's digs, where he can be with his family.
It's fine for beavers . . .
" . . . but not for me!" he tells us as we turn the page to find him trapped in tangle of twigs. Further on in the book we read, "Brown bats dwell in a pine hotel, / feet over head— / no need for a bed! / It's fine for bats . . ." Again we turn the page to find
. . . the little boy hanging upside down on a tree limb among the bats while he exclaims "but not for me!"
After a day of imagining all kinds of abodes from logs to hives to sycamore trees, our young protagonist makes his way home. With its red roof and little light and fluffy cat it welcomes the little boy into the cozy interior where he finds his dad waiting by the fire and his "warm little bed" and the books he's read. A fine and fitting ending for this charming, lyrical tale.
 
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kmbrown1 | 1 autre critique | Apr 15, 2009 |
This book is more appropriate for younger students, like preschool or kindergarten. The book is in a shape of a shoe and has cut-outs. The book talks about a tired mother mouse living with a bunch of little mice. She decides the need to pitch in and chores will be done a lot faster and easier.
 
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ksjeffcoat | 1 autre critique | Apr 7, 2009 |
This is a story about a poor couple whose generosity is continually repaid to them - first, when they get a magic amber that fills their ricepot and second, when the villagers they've helped keep paying them back even after the couple loses the amber.

Bit long, though.½
 
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conuly | 2 autres critiques | Sep 1, 2008 |
This Korean legend, akin to "The Goose with the Golden Egg," tells of how a single act of generosity and kindness multiplies into riches for an elderly sharecropping couple "a long time ago" whose landowner levies taxes that sap their winter stores. The landowner steals the magic amber stone, but like all such tales, all comes full circle in the end.
 
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sungene | 2 autres critiques | Aug 25, 2008 |
This is our second in the series...I'm not sure what order they were printed in or meant to be read in, but we're picking them up as they are available at our local library. This volume of Legends of the World find us in Haiti, spending time with Coucou the night owl who, believing himself to be ugly, hides from the rest of the animals and only come out when the moon is dark. One night, he meets Drina the swallow who lost her way when it got dark and, since it is the dark moon, he escorts her home. What ensues is a bit of a romance, though only when the moon is dark, he takes care never to let Drina see his ugly face. When she announces her family is throwing a party for him because he's spending so much time with Drina, he knows he's in trouble and turns to his friend, Rouge the rooster (who is, apparently quite the ladies man and none too happy that Coucou might steal away a lady bird that he's not yet had a crack at). Well, when the night of the party rolls around, Rogue turns out to only be interested in insuring that Drina is his, and tries to trick Coucou into abandoning Drina, so he can step in and "console" her.

You know, this true moral of this story might be lost on young children, but it's an interesting and colorful tale non-the-less. The language is simple and straightforward, even if the point is a bit ambiguous...and the illustrations are a riot of color. We enjoyed this tale...but I think we will probably have to revisit it when the kids are a bit older, so they can pick up additional things from the story.

Overall, I think this series is a great basic introduction to a wide array of stories from many cultures the world over...a jumping off point also for kids to research more into the culture and mythology of any given place. I'd recommend this for introducing young children to mythology and folklore. The age range cited is 9-12 which is probably the range of kids who would most appreciate and benefit from the story and additional information provided...but even younger kids (say 5-8) will love the stories and vivid, colorful illustrations...the stores aren't so complex or long that they will lose interest in them. I would definitely buy this for my permanent collection and hope to read more from this series soon! I give it a B-, simply because young children might miss the point of the story altogether.
 
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the_hag | Jan 23, 2008 |
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