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Chargement... Peach Fuzz--Scholastic Exclusive (édition 2005)par Jared Hodges
Information sur l'oeuvrePeach Fuzz, Vol. 1 (v. 1) par Jared Hodges
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Inscrivez-vous à LibraryThing pour découvrir si vous aimerez ce livre Actuellement, il n'y a pas de discussions au sujet de ce livre. One of the better things to come out of Deviantart media works. Not that there haven't been a lot of wonderful works that have happened on Devon art and come from Devon art, it's just a lot of the comics from there are very lackluster and bland. Not that this one is excellent or breaking the mold it has its own little lackluster moments and is mostly fixated on a cute ferret being there to distract you from all the problems. Peach is a ferret and she does ferret things. She's for some reason scared. Things like hands are monsters and everything around her is a monster and everything is in her imagination. This is cute for this series but only for the first book. One of the main problems I have is the portrayal of ferrets is incorrect. Ferrets are very bold and wild creatures that are hunters. A lot of the time Peach is portrayed as being nervous, scared, skittering away and hiding. Ferrets are warriors they are tiny creatures that hunt things bigger than them and no no fear. It's part of the mustelid family and maybe that's the problem I had most with this. The animal does not act like it's actual animal counterpart. While this series is highly anime-styled, it's original and definitely worth a read. It stays relatively along the lines of Hamtaro minus a big cast of characters. Literally I think there's ten at most throughout this whole thing? And they're almost all humans. Eh. I found the story to be very stunted, it mostly stays inside of Peach's head, almost every adventure is just her imagination and when that's totally starts to run out it doesn't have the charm it should. Hamtaro at least had them go unreal adventures and maybe that's where this series fails. I felt like I was supposed to feel more for this character but these pages are very bland and it really feels dated to the 2000s in hindsight. While Hamtaro is forever, Peachfuzz is locked in the 2000s. I don't know if the artist still does anything or even has moved on and started their own new project, I hope them the best but I honestly can say that if they abandon this project it wasn't a bad decision. It's about a 9 year old girl named Amanda who is lonely and wants to fit in at school so she gets a pet. At the pet store she picks out a ferret whom she names Peach who happens to have one heck of a princess complex. I felt it was good but more for younger girls and tweens more than teenagers (and me). Peach Fuzz is the winner of the Rising Stars of Manga award. This book is about a little girl who is lonely and wants a pet. She begs and begs her mom until her mom finally gives in and lets her get a pet. Her mom finally takes her to the pet store and out of all the animals she chooses a ferret. She's excited about this little animal because no one at school has a pet like this. There is one rule though, the ferret cannot bite the little girl! When she chose the ferret she picked the only one that did not bite her. When she got the ferret home it ended up giving her alot of trouble. The ferret saw the cage as a dungeon and the little girls hand as a five headed monster. Peaches, the ferret, was a princess to the other ferrets at the store but when the little girl took her home and put her in the cage she became frightened of what seemed to be a dungeon. Although this book is cute, I'm not at all a fan of manga or any other graphic novels. It was neat how in the book the point of views were shown from both the little girls and the ferrets views. The picturew]s were well depicted also. The book also did a good job about stating random facts about ferrets throughout the story. Classroom Extension #1: Let the children draw their own mini graphic novels. They can use their pets or whatever they want to in order to create their novel. Give them a large sheet of blank white paper and have them draw the story out with the captions and word bubbles. Classroom Extension #2: Have the children do research on an animal that they would like to do as a pet. They can record their finding and pictures and post them on a posterboard. Get the children to bring in a stuffed animal of the animal that they choose. Have a show and tell session so the children can tell the class about the animal that they would like to have as a pet.
There’s a lot of potential in this premise, but the book would have benefited from some experienced editing to tighten the story and check the messages sent. Appartient à la sériePeach Fuzz (Volume 1)
Amanda is a lonely little girl. Her mother means well, but doesn't have a lot of time for a 9-year-old and, after plenty of begging from Amanda, agrees to let her have a pet. Amanda chooses a ferret (and names her Peach) because ferrets aren't ordinary and, darn it, neither is she! But her mom sets up Two Big Rules: 1) Amanda has to care for Peach, and 2) Peach can't ever bite Amanda. It seems like Amanda finally has the friend she's needed... but Peach sees Amanda's hands as five-serpent monsters - and bites in what she thinks of as self-defense! What will little, lonely Amanda do now if her mom finds out her new best pet is actually a biter?!. Aucune description trouvée dans une bibliothèque |
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Google Books — Chargement... GenresClassification décimale de Melvil (CDD)741.5973The arts Graphic arts and decorative arts Drawing & drawings Cartoons, Caricatures, Comics Collections North American United States (General)Classification de la Bibliothèque du CongrèsÉvaluationMoyenne:
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FROM AMAZON: Amanda is a lonely little girl. Her mother means well, but doesn't have a lot of time for a 9-year-old and, after plenty of begging from Amanda, agrees to let her have a pet. Amanda chooses a ferret (and names her Peach) because ferrets aren't ordinary and, darn it, neither is she! It seems like Amanda finally has the friend she's needed ... but Peach sees Amanda's hands as five-serpent monsters -- and bites in what she thinks of as self-defense!