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Mary Poppins by P. L. Travers
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Mary Poppins

by P. L. Travers

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Though the book is choppy, this works in its favor for reading aloud; each chapter is a separate event, with no real need to remember what happened before. Those who come to the book from the 1964 Disney film may be confused, as the book is considerably different. Good for pleasure reading and encouraging imagination, as well as book-film comparisons.

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Amazon.com (ISBN 0152017178, Paperback)

For all her offended sniffs and humphs, Mary Poppins is likely the most exciting nanny England--and the world--has ever seen. Young Jane and Michael Banks have no idea what's in store for them when Mary Poppins blows in on the east wind one autumn evening. Soon, though, the children are having tea on the ceiling, flying around the world in a minute (visiting polar bears and hyacinth macaws on the way), and secretly watching as their unusual nanny pastes gold paper stars to the sky. Mary's stern and haughty exterior belies the delightful nonsense she harbors; her charges, as well as her literary fans, respect and adore her.

Grownups who have forgotten Mary Poppins's true charms will be tickled pink to rediscover this uniquely unsentimental fantasy. Younger readers will walk into Mary's world without batting an eye--of course the animals in the zoo exchange places with people on the night of the full moon. Certainly a falling star landing on a cow's horn will make her dance ceaselessly. Why wouldn't one be able to enter into a chalk picture? The only disappointing aspect of this classic is that it doesn't go on forever! (Ages 9 to 12) --Emilie Coulter

(retrieved from Amazon Mon, 25 Aug 2008 11:43:46 -0400)

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