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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. A story from the perspective of a middle child, Clarice Bean. All she wants is some peace and quiet but she has to share a room with her little brother Minal Cricket. She has an imaginary line drawn across their room and Minal isn't suppose to cross it. He 'accidentally' does so Clarice throws his blanket out the window. Which leads to her father getting into an argument with the neighbor and the problem elevates. Clarice's dream comes true, as punishment she gets sent to her room (alone) for three hours. She finally gets the peace and quiet she has been looking for. Clarice Bean is wonderful and utterly quirky. This was Lauren Child's first book as an author, and I am so glad she found her unique voice to compliment her unique illustrations. This is my daughter's current favourite book as she's graduating from Charlie and Lola, Child's later creations and a media phenomenon, to ever so slightly more grown-up stuff! Clarice Bean just wants some peace and quiet, but she has to share a room with her younger brother and has a crazy family to boot. We meet all the crazy people she deals with and learn about them and her life. She finally gets some quiet when she is sent to her room for tormenting her little brother. one of my top 5 picture books no reviews | add a review
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| Book description |
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Lauren Child's wacky, wonderful book is full of boisterous color and scattered text. Clarice Bean's family members lurk in doorways, flick noses, and throw up their hands in dismay, all with equal measures of melodrama. With big words for big thoughts, sideways lines for sideways ideas, and a curly, flowery font for Mom's pronouncements ("No flicking noses with rulers," she says, although celery is acceptable), Child gleefully tosses proper book-writing standards straight out the window. Young readers, especially those with vexing relatives, will shout with joy when they find this gem. (Click to see a sample spread. Copyright 1999 by Lauren Child. With permission of Candlewick Press and Orchard Books, UK.) (Ages 4 to 8) --Emilie Coulter
(retrieved from Amazon Tue, 05 Jan 2010 22:32:37 -0500)
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