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$15.99
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More copies of this ISBN:Wolf! Wolf!by John Rocco
Synopses & ReviewsPublisher Comments:The grumpy old wolf is too tired to chase after goats, too creaky to tend to his garden, and very hungry. One day he hears a young boy calling his name...could it be he's calling him over to share a meal? Why yes, look at all those delicious goats! The boy may fancy himself a prankster but our old wolf is just as crafty as ever and manages to outfox the boy to get one step closer to that double goat pie he's been dreaming of....But in an unexpected twist, our curmudgeonly protagonist finds what he's been missing most - a friend. Plus, double goat pie is overrated anyway. Review:"Ably illustrated and imaginatively reconceived, this version of 'The Boy Who Cried Wolf' stars not the boy, but the wolf. No bloodthirsty brigand, this wolf is an arthritic has-been who's reduced to raising vegetables in a weed-choked garden. The boy's false cries from over the hill raise the wolf's hopes: could this mean a free meal? While children wonder whether the wolf will snag his prey, adults may be intrigued by the story's exotic setting. Under a canopy of wind-swept trees and cherry blossoms, the wolf sports a Chinese silk jacket of the type seen in old Fu Manchu movies, the boy wears a topknot, and the neighbors who complain about the boy's false cries sport queues and silk caps. Rocco (illustrator of Alice by Whoopi Goldberg) creates a world with internal consistency, and his deftly paced long shots and close-ups testify to his previous work in animation (including as art director for Shrek). The wolf smoothly talks the boy out of a goat ('The villagers are only going to believe you if you really are missing a goat. I can help you with that,' he says) but, in a beguiling ending, he spares the goat (which has eaten the weeds from his garden). 'What's one breakfast,' he tells the goat magnanimously, 'compared to delicious vegetables for the rest of my days?' The wolf may move slowly, but the story gallops. Rocco substitutes a series of giggles for the traditional finger-pointing moral, a welcome development. Ages 3-7." Publishers Weekly (Copyright Reed Business Information, Inc.) Synopsis:Putting a new twist on a classic "The Boy Who Cried Wolf," this retelling finds a curmudgeonly wolf discovering what he's been missing the most. Full color.
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