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Check for Availabilityout of stock. Click on the button below to search for this title in other formats. 19 Girls and Me
Synopses & ReviewsPublisher Comments:By the acclaimed author of "The Journey of Oliver K. Woodman" and the illustrator of "Bedtime!" comes a delightful story about a kindergarten class made up of 19 little girls and one little boy. Full color. Review:"Gender weighs on the mind of John Hercules Po, the only boy in his kindergarten class. Every day, John's second-grader brother warns that playing with girls turns a guy 'into a sissy,' and John anxiously asserts he'll turn the girls 'into tomboys' first. At recess, John eagerly proposes what he considers boyish fun ('Let's build a skyscraper!'). To his surprise, his classmates add to his original ideas — although the 19 girls follow John's initiative every time. After a feigned battle with a yeti atop icy-blue Everest slopes, John reports that the girls 'throw snowballs hard.' When they pretend a wooden wagon is a race car and christen it the Sarah Louise, John protests the 'sissy name,' but takes the driver's seat, with his companions in a toboggan row behind him. Salerno (Coco the Carrot) styles his graceful and energetic pictures after Bemelmans's Madeline, and gives the pert girls a variety of curls, braids and skin tones; John's blue school blazer and tie stand out from his classmates' uniform red jumpers. Pattison (The Journey of Oliver K. Woodman) challenges the terms 'sissy' and 'tomboy'; when John's brother judges the girls 'nineteen tomboys,' John corrects him by saying 'nineteen friends.' Ultimately, though, the 'one lone boy' — no sissy he — exhibits the strongest personality and the greatest influence. Horace and Morris but Mostly Dolores and Chester's Way do a better job of undermining girl/boy stereotypes. Ages 4-up. (June)" Publishers Weekly (Copyright Reed Business Information, Inc.) What Our Readers Are SayingBe the first to add a comment for a chance to win!Product Details
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