|
Read all 3 Reviews
|
Write a Review
|
|
About the Author
Location: Los Angeles, CA
Reviews written: 842
Trusted by: 1186 members
|
Monsters can be silly too
Written: Oct 08 '00
Pros:interactive, helpful, great resource for colors and taking turns, sharing and feelings
Cons:None
”If your happy and you know it clap your hands, if your happy and you know it, than your face will really show it …”! This book entitled, Glad Monster Sad Monster is a great way to teach a child the above lyrics and use the pictures inside this interactive hardcover book.
I purchased this book from the Scholastic Book Club through the elementary school my children attend. I wrote a review on this book club as well for further details on ordering from them. The June 1999 book club news is when I found the book listed at a 53% savings from the regular price of $14.95 to a sale price of $6.95. I picked it out because my older son has social skills deficits due to his disability and I wanted to help him learn to express his feelings.
This has turned into one of his favorite non-animal books. Although the pictures are cartoon like animals, he prefers the life like pictures of animals. Some of his quotes from looking through this book are:
Next is a really funny guy
He’s kind of different
He looks mad
He looks kinda scared
A scary ghost
He looks happy
Look Mom I’m a ghost
See the small spider web on the page
He’s a pink one
The book is thirty pages long in dark black pages with bright happy and sad colorful faces with two holes for the eyes and the larger shape opening for the nose. In the front of the book is the diagram that explains the steps to use the flaps. A child who is not yet able to read will know how to follow these self-explanatory steps with cute pictures. First the book gets opened with the flap being lifted, read the text and try on the mask while pretending to have fun!
The very last page on the right side is a box (in purple) with the following information, which I find truly amazing:
"A note from the artist:
This book was created from start to finish on an Apple Computer using FreeHand 5.5 and QuarkXpress 3.2. The fonts used are American Typewriter, Tekton, and Giddyup.”
I honestly have no idea how difficult that would be but the fact that this information was shared for other aspiring authors/artists to try is a nice touch. The text copyright is by Anne Miranda with the illustrations by Ed Emberley. On the opposite side of the note is a list of books by Ed and Anne. I will be looking for those as well in the near future.
This book is published simultaneously in Canada by Little, Brown & Company (Canada) Limited and printed in Thailand. This first edition was copyrighted in 1997. ISBN#0-316-57395-7. The price on the back page for Canada is $19.95.
An interesting note in this yellow box states that no part of the book can be reproduced by electronic or mechanical means, except by a reviewer, who may quote brief passages in a review. I have never seen this type of wording before in a book and I liked it.
These very last two pages have along side the two boxes pictures of all the characters with their arms outstretched and the words Boo! above them. They all have cute tails with arrows at the end with bees flying around and heart shapes floating on the page. There are dogs, cats and alligators too.
Inside the book from the first page we have a yellow monster with birthday presents and the corresponding pictures showing what you do at a birthday party. The alligator picture has an arrow pointing to the page to lift to open the flap and see the mask to place the eyes and nose in. Can you guess what makes you glad?
The blue monster looks quite blue with a sad blue drummer feeling blue because it rained on his parade. The blue balloon shows the arrow where to find the sad monster face. These monster faces have the colors reflecting the feelings as well as the facial features reflecting the mood of the monster.
The pink monster starts off with valentine’s day and feels loved in all the pictures with a puppy at the arrow taking you to the loving monster mask. There are pink flowers, cookies and hearts on these pages.
An orange monster listens to the thunderstorms while searching under his bed wondering about creepy things. A scary spider points you to the page to see the orange monster with the green nose. Then the purple monster likes to make funny faces and feel silly doing sounds like Goink! A silly looking cat will point you towards the purple monster asking you to be silly with his face.
Next is a red monster that gets splashed and laughed at which makes him very angry. A bird chirping leads the way to the red angry face with mean looking teeth. The last monster is the green scary one who likes to Shoo! The birds around and be very scary. There is a green cactus that shows the arrow to get to the green scary monster mask.
To recap the colors and masks are as follows:
Yellow = glad
Blue = sad
Pink = loving
Orange = worried
Purple = silly
Red = angry
Green = scary
This is a fun and imaginative book that can be utilized alone by a child to experiment with the faces or masks depending on what they want to call them. You can involve more than one child and adult and use the colors to interact with other toys to pick which feeling they are.
The same can be done with clothing if you have your child get their clothes out the next day for school. You could ask them how they are feeling and what type of monster they want to be, especially since this is the month, October, for Halloween.
This is a good book for a home day care to purchase to help with children who have difficulty expressing their feelings. For a home schooling family this would be an addition for your library. For families who have children with disabilities this can be utilized to help develop a way to interact in other ways with colors and masks.
There are many opportunities to explore one’s feelings and see what makes the various colored monsters happy and/or sad. A whole week project could be used for a home care environment or home school with each day being another feeling color using toys and games chosen to match the color of the day. The kids take turns opening the flap and placing the monster masks on their faces. This will help them learn together and take turns.
The Glad Monster, Sad Monster book promotes asking questions as in are you happy, sad, glad and/or what makes you feel this way? Other kids can have fun pulling up the nose off the mask when it is on another child. You can also use this book to help children draw happy and sad faces to aid in their sharing of feelings to be used when they want to. I suggest adding this book to a holiday list to be enjoyed throughout the year.
Recommended: Yes
Read all 3 Reviews
|
Write a Review
|
|
|
|
Related Deals You Might Like...
Free Worldwide Delivery : To Market, to Market : Paperback : Houghton Mifflin Harcourt : 9780152163983 : 0152163980 : 01 Sep 2001 : Anne Miranda's inv...
This is a story of John Calloway and Anne Hubert - a lawyer and a social worker - drawn into a case involving a child in state custody who goes missin...
Free Worldwide Delivery : Monster Math : Paperback : Voyager Books,U.S. : 9780152165307 : 0152165304 : 01 Sep 2002 : Little ones can learn counting an...
As one little monster finds out at her birthday party, it takes about fifty. Get ready for a monstrously good time! Little ones will learn counting an...
Free Worldwide Delivery : Madame Doubtfire : Paperback : Penguin Books Ltd : 9780140373554 : 0140373551 : 07 Dec 1995 : Lydia, Christopher and Natalie...
|