MOST OF THE TIME, Randolph is very, very nice. But when his friend Ivy gets invited to a really great sleepover birthday party and he doesn't, Randolph feels a little left out, and sad, and mad. And... This description may be from another edition of this product.
A gentle picturebook tale kids will find involving and fun.
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 17 years ago
Most of the time Randolph the Beaver is very nice - but something happens and he feels left out, then sad, then mad - and rotten. Can he change back just as quickly, and what happens before that time? Friendships and changing moods are charted in a gentle picturebook tale kids will find involving and fun.
Book Review: When Randolph Turned Rotten
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 17 years ago
A book about feelings, well done, is a goldmine for teachers, parents, and students. In my opinion, here's what "well done" means: 1. The story stands on its own, and the lesson isn't forced. If things are forced, you start getting into "And now on a very special episode of..."-territory. You know, like when your favorite sitcom all of a sudden gets serious? Readers need to be drawn into the story first, before they are clobbered over the head with the message. 2. The approach is fresh. If you're going to be telling a story about feelings, it's gotta be inventive. 3. It's something youngsters can relate to. The feelings presented in the book should be emotions that kids have dealt with before. Well, lets look at a summary of "When Randolph Turned Rotten", to see if it boasts the qualities listed above: Randolph (a beaver) and his best friend Ivy (a goose) live together in a big city high-rise. The two are inseparable. When Ivy receives an invitation to an "all girl birthday sleepover" and Randolph does not, a mix of feelings overtakes him. "And that's when Randolph's insides changed from very-best-friend insides to horrible, rotten, awful, and icky insides." The beaver does his best to ruin things for Ivy, offering to help pack so he can sabotage the trip (a bag full of logs have a tendency to do that). But Randolph's efforts backfire, and he wonders if Ivy will ever be his friend again. A story that stands firmly on two legs? Check. A fresh approach? Yep. Something young readers can relate to? Affirmative. "When Randolph Turned Rotten" is well done indeed. Some great comic moments and wonderful acrylic illustrations sweeten the pot. Call up your 49er friends - gold has been struck.
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