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Loading... And Tango Makes Threeby Justin Richardson (otherwise under Peter Parnell)
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. Tells the true story of two male penguins who fell in love while living in the zoo of New York City's Central Park. One of the zoo keepers who knew these penguins very well gave them the chance to raise an egg that would have not been able to be taken care of by its own parents. They raised the egg to be a happy and healthy young female penguin who readers can still go see in this famous zoo. This was a warm and touching story, i shed a couple tears. I own this book This is a story of Roy and Silo, two male penguins at the Central Park Zoo in New York. These two male penguins spend all of their time together and notice that they are not able to have a family like the other penguins in the habitat, although they try to hatch a rock. The penguin keeper gives the couple an egg that has been abandoned and the couple nurture the egg until it is hatched. When it is hatched that penguin becomes the first baby penguin with two dads. The two male penguins and their new baby became a family and cuddled up like the rest of the families. This is a super adorable book. A good way to introduce families and what makes a family. It's very simple and an easy read for toddlers. The pictures are soft and simple. Sweet little book, true story, about a pair of male penguins in Central Park Zoo that paired up and tried to raise a chick - brooding a rock, for instance. A keeper gave them a spare egg (second fertile egg laid by a penguin pair that usually managed to raise one), and they brooded and raised the chick successfully. Nice story. BTW - it's on the list of suggested banned books this year (2009) - sigh. Ages 4 and Up. And Tango Makes Three has been THE controversial picture book since it was published. The story of two male penguins, Roy and Silo, who hatch an egg, it is alternatively loved and detested. I found it quite mediocre. The most charming aspect of the book is the Author's Note in the back which explains that the book is based on real penguins at the Central Park Zoo. I enjoyed the closing sentence, but overall the writing lacks flow. The illustrations, while nicely done in watercolor, don't give you any sense of the penguins' personalities - you can't tell Roy and Silo apart. This book is recommended for all sizes of public libraries and elementary school libraries, because it offers a story of an non-traditional family that can be difficult to find in a picture book and because its "banned" status makes it very popular. no reviews | add a review
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(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:16 -0400)
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