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Hardcover A Glorious Day Book

ISBN: 0689848021

ISBN13: 9780689848025

A Glorious Day

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Recommended

Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good*

*Best Available: (ex-library)

$5.69
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List Price $16.95
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Book Overview

Henry's day is full.From breakfast to bedtime there is fun with his friends in their small red brick building.There are steps out front to count climbing up and to count coming down.On the street there's the garbage man and a tow truck to watch.And just around the corner there's a playground and even more friends.Fullness makes Henry's day (and every day for Henry) simply GLORIOUS.

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

Instantly Relating to Little Ones

I bought this book for my clients son who moved from the city to Kentucky. He identified with it immediately. Amy Schwartz really knows how to reel in the toddler crowd and even entertain the preschoolers for countless retelling of these realistic portrayals.

A sweet & gentle story

My 3 & 8 year old children both love this book. It is a very sweet re-telling of a small child's (anything but) average day in the apartment building he shares with other families.

Excellent book for 3-5 year olds

My son loves this book, perhaps because it goes through an entire day in the life of toddlers, and he sees so many things that are familiar to him. The kids eat breakfast, get dressed, play, take naps, have baths, and get stories read at bedtime. He loves following the children through their day. We read this one every night.

Glory be

I suffered a most violent shock to my delicate little system when I discovered that Amy Schwartz, an artist of Peter Sis like illustrations, is the author/illustrator responsible for the fabulous, "Bea and Mr. Jones". That particular picture book is without comparison. It is perfect and without flaw. Yet since its publication Ms. Schwartz has retooled her artistic bent. Instead of grand silly stories with grand silly (and large) black and white pictures, she now creates delicate tiny pen and ink drawing in contained colorful landscapes. There's a lot of white space to contend with in a modern Amy Schwartz picture book. Now this isn't necessarily a bad thing. And certainly a book like, "A Glorious Day" has its charms. But I yearn for the day Ms. Schwartz puts aside her toddler fare and return to her kindergarten roots again. But that's just me. In "A Glorious Day" there is a large cast of characters to contend with. If you've a good head on your shoulders then it shouldn't be too difficult to parse. The first sentence in the book is, "One baby, two little girls, three big boys, four little boys, two cats, and a bird live in a small apartment building make of red brick. They are all early risers". And we're off! With appealing zip and verve the reader bounces between the various homes, families, and kids in each of the important apartments. Kids wake one another up, eat breakfasts of varying health (I gotta wonder who gets the potato chips), and begin their day. Parents run to work or greet the babysitters. Kids accompany their various guardians. I won't sum it all up for you since (if you have children of your own you'll well know) a lot can happen in a single day. The book chronicles the various crises (lost pet), triumphs, and mundane yet oddly riveting moments that categorize a toddler's day-to-day life. By the end of the book the reader truly feels as if he or she has undergone all the things the kids here have, and the title of book seems to nicely sum up your final impression. The families in this book are oh so metropolitan. Author Amy Schwartz hails from Brooklyn herself, and you can remain confident that she knows whereof she speaketh. From the concrete park to the structure of the buildings, this is a world that will be comfortingly familiar to some and enticingly new and different to others. I also liked the time and attention Ms. Schwartz has paid to multiculturalism here. The book has two white families, one interracial family, and one black family. I would've loved to have seen a gay family as well, but I guess a person can't ask for everything. What's really impressive here is that Schwartz seems to know these people really well. You can check out how in one household everything's neat as a pin while in another things are a little more haywire. As for the text, it's sweet. I particularly enjoyed the moment where Henry's mother points out to her son that a fellow toddler has "lovely underpants". Says
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