Picture of author.

Mara Bergman

Author of Snip Snap!: What's That?

28+ Works 801 Members 29 Reviews

About the Author

Includes the name: Mara Bergman

Series

Works by Mara Bergman

Snip Snap!: What's That? (2005) 253 copies, 15 reviews
Oliver Who Would Not Sleep (2007) 162 copies, 2 reviews
Yum, Yum! (2008) 61 copies, 7 reviews
Bears, Bears Everywhere! (1997) 31 copies
The Tall Man and the Small Mouse (2018) 26 copies, 1 review
Musical Beds (2002) 17 copies
Glitter Kitty (2005) 11 copies
Best Friends (2014) 10 copies
Itchy Itch Itch (2012) 9 copies
Oliver and the noisy baby (2011) 6 copies

Associated Works

The Poetry Cure (2005) — Contributor — 21 copies, 1 review

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Gender
female
Nationality
USA (birth)
Birthplace
Bronx, New York, USA
Places of residence
New York, USA
Wantagh, New York, USA
Tunbridge Wells, Kent, England, UK
Associated Place (for map)
New York, USA

Members

Reviews

35 reviews
This is a great, suspenseful book about three children trapped in an apartment with an alligator. And were the children scared?

YOU BET THEY WERE!

Of course, there's a happy ending, when they finally stand up to the alligator and chase him away before he can eat them.

This is great fun to read, with the frequent breaks to yell "YOU BET THEY WERE!" at the top of your lungs, and the opportunities to ham it up with those sound-words. I suppose it might be a little scary for some children, as there show more is the constant threat of death by alligator, but.... show less
½
Retelling: There is an alligator in the house and the children are scared. But in the end, with a little courage, they prevail. Mara Bergman uses repetition and sound words to create a sense of suspense. Illustrator Nick Maland, captures only pieces of the beast at a time, making the alligator seem even more mysterious.

Thoughts and Feelings: This book reads like a ghost story to me. The author slows down the alligator's approach revealing only a piece of the alligator's fearsome appearance show more at a time and leaving the rest to the listener's imagination. show less
This book has amazingly colorful pages with full illustrations. Not leaving any white space. The words are expressive with different sizes and fonts to add life to the book. It makes reading the book with passion and excitement just that much easier. It shows the children being afraid of the alligator and all the things that are scary about the alligator. But, eventually the children get tired of being scared of the alligator. They grow courage and yell at the alligator to go away. Thats show more when the alligator gets scared of them and goes back home. It's bright illustrations truly make this kid-friendly and expressive. I would highly recommend this book for a read-aloud. show less
Great repetition and mystery. The kids went crazy for it. It's a little too involved for a young toddler set, but it could be done anywhere from 2 1/2 or 3 all the way through ages 6 or 7.

Good storytime fun.

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Awards

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Associated Authors

Nick Maland Illustrator
Emily Bolam Illustrator

Statistics

Works
28
Also by
1
Members
801
Popularity
#31,838
Rating
3.8
Reviews
29
ISBNs
68
Languages
3

Charts & Graphs