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Cinnamon & the April Shower/Canela y el aguacero de abril (Bilingual) (Solomon Raven Story, 3) by Amy Crane Johnson
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Cinnamon & the April Shower/Canela y el aguacero de abril (Bilingual)…

by Amy Crane Johnson

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One caveat: I did not read this book to or with a child, so the opinions and review are mine alone.

Neither the text nor illustrations in this book can be recommended. The writing was uninspired, and when read aloud the phrasing was awkward. The main thrust of the story seems to be that preparation is the key to weathering a storm. That is a fine message, but it comes off as pedantic and anxiety-inducing. Especially when the only "preparation" seems to be making sure you are safe at home.

The illustrator certainly has a style; however it the color palette suggested autumn more readily than the April of the title. Most of the illustrations were so low-contrast as to lose the main characters into the background scenery.

Note that the book is published in multiple language editions. I was looking forward to was the bilingual text; however, I received and reviewed the English-only version. ( )
  artcat | Oct 22, 2009 |
This book is part of a series, set in a forest, that reflects the weather of the seasons. This book occurs during the spring and describes the impact of spring showers on the baby animals and their families in the forest. The title does not reflect the actual events of the story. Cinnamon is a bear cub, yet the central character of the story is the raven. The illustrations are not child-friendly but are dark and almost sinister. The raven especially has a rather mean aspect. Although the premise of the book is valuable, the book itself does not match the descriptions and is an unsatisfactory read for both children and adults. ( )
  jacobsla | Jul 31, 2009 |
We really enjoyed this book. My 7 year old read it first. she understood everything that was in the book on her own. Then she read it to her little brother. Little brother sat still long enough to listen! The pictures are sweet. The bears look just like you could squeeze and hug them. The various animals take on personality that matches the story. The meaning in the book is well received by young children. ( )
  gkmiller4 | Jul 29, 2009 |
This is an excellent book, enjoyable both for children and the adults who read it to them.
It is the story of a community of animals and their interdependence on one another regarding their relationship to nature. A meaningful message is threaded through an action adventure tale, short enough to captivate the imagination of even the youngest audience.
The illustrations are pleasant, drawn to a child's level and appropriately contrast light and dark as the April Shower makes it's progression across the sky.
There are 3 more books in this series, each corresponding to a season. Highly reccomended. ( )
  madforbooks | Jul 24, 2009 |
I received this book as an error through the early reviewers give away. While the book is said to be bilingual, this particular edition was solely in English.

The illustrations were well done and cartoonish, albeit a bit dark. The text was clearly printed and readable.

As a teacher, I felt that this book didn't hit the mark it was going for. The first half of the book is a story book that talks about the animals and their families. The second half is about why we have rain.

Although the book seems to be targeted for a preschool audience, the text was meant for older children. The use of repetitive and predictable text would have been more appropriate for the age group. ( )
  jesscanning | Jul 16, 2009 |
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Series (with order)
Canonical Title
Original publication date
People/Characters
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Important events
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Epigraph
Dedication
First words
Solomon Raven, the wisest bird in all the forest, perched high up on a branch in his favorite hickory tree.
Quotations
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
Disambiguation notice
Publisher's editors
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Wikipedia in English

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Book description

Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0972019227, Library Binding)

Bilingual (English/Spanish) full text translation children's picture book

It’s spring! The forest is full of newborn animals and plants. An April shower frightens Cinnamon, her new cub, and their woodland friends. Solomon Raven explains the importance of rain for animal and forest survival.

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:02 -0400)

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