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OverviewIbexes on crater ledges Call out, ""Maa!"" and walk the edges. A rhyming introduction to some of Israel's unique animals like the hoopoe (the national bird of Israel), hyrax, and sand cats. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Jamie Kiffel-Alcheh , Ivana KumanPublisher: Kar-Ben Copies Ltd Imprint: Kar-Ben Copies Ltd Dimensions: Width: 16.30cm , Height: 1.00cm , Length: 16.30cm Weight: 0.113kg ISBN: 9781541500495ISBN 10: 1541500490 Pages: 12 Publication Date: 01 March 2019 Recommended Age: From 4 to 5 years Audience: Children/juvenile , Children / Juvenile Format: Board book Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In stock We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsAny author can find a rhyme for 'cow' or 'moo.' By the time they start school, most kids have read dozens of books about farm animals, but they may not have seen an ibex or a hyrax or a hoopoe. This board book would make an excellent compendium for children who want to be zoologists, but it creates a huge challenge for the author: Almost nothing rhymes with 'ibex.' She goes out of her way to work around the problem: 'Ibexes on crater ledges / Call out 'Maa!' and walk the edges.' Every couplet is awkward, but every new animal is surprising, and Kuman finds unexpected ways of painting them. Her bats are shaped like Chinese dumplings, and her camels are an unexpected assortment of geometric objects: a mountain peak perched atop a tiny rectangle underneath a slightly lopsided eggplant. The book also provides a variety of sound effects. The last two pages are crammed with 'chirrup's and 'urr's and 'oop's. It feels as though an entire encyclopedia of animals--a very odd one--has been squeezed into 12 pages. The book also gives kids an incentive to travel. The cover copy says, 'Meet some of Israel's unique animals.' The forced rhymes will be too painful for some readers, but very patient children will find it hilarious and surreal and a little startling, and they'll learn years' worth of animal facts before they reach kindergarten. --Kirkus Reviews -- Journal Any author can find a rhyme for 'cow' or 'moo.' By the time they start school, most kids have read dozens of books about farm animals, but they may not have seen an ibex or a hyrax or a hoopoe. This board book would make an excellent compendium for children who want to be zoologists, but it creates a huge challenge for the author: Almost nothing rhymes with 'ibex.' She goes out of her way to work around the problem: 'Ibexes on crater ledges / Call out 'Maa!' and walk the edges.' Every couplet is awkward, but every new animal is surprising, and Kuman finds unexpected ways of painting them. Her bats are shaped like Chinese dumplings, and her camels are an unexpected assortment of geometric objects: a mountain peak perched atop a tiny rectangle underneath a slightly lopsided eggplant. The book also provides a variety of sound effects. The last two pages are crammed with 'chirrup's and 'urr's and 'oop's. It feels as though an entire encyclopedia of animals--a very odd one--has been squeezed into 12 pages. The book also gives kids an incentive to travel. The cover copy says, 'Meet some of Israel's unique animals.' The forced rhymes will be too painful for some readers, but very patient children will find it hilarious and surreal and a little startling, and they'll learn years' worth of animal facts before they reach kindergarten. --Kirkus Reviews --Journal Author InformationJamie Kiffel-Alcheh regularly writes for National Geographic KIDS. Her books include Can You Hear a Coo, Coo? and Listen! Israel's All Around. She is also a lyricist for pop songs, advertisements and motion pictures. She lives in Burbank, California. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |