
Cindy Ward
Author of Cookie's Week
About the Author
Works by Cindy Ward
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- Gender
- female
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Day by day, Cookie the cat finds a way to make mischief in this adorable picture book for younger children. From falling in the toilet on Monday to climbing the curtains on Saturday, our feline heroine knows how to make a mess! The narrative closes with the hope that on Sunday Cookie will rest, but the illustrations make it clear that kitty chaos never sleeps...
With a simple but amusing text from author Cindy Ward and cute-as-a-button illustrations from illustrator Tomie dePaola, Cookie's show more Week is an entertaining little book, sure to win a chuckle of recognition and fondness from every cat lover. The children's librarian at my local library branch likes to read this one at storytime, and it's not difficult to see why! Recommended to young cat lovers, and to very young picture book audiences who enjoy stories about mischievous creatures. show less
With a simple but amusing text from author Cindy Ward and cute-as-a-button illustrations from illustrator Tomie dePaola, Cookie's show more Week is an entertaining little book, sure to win a chuckle of recognition and fondness from every cat lover. The children's librarian at my local library branch likes to read this one at storytime, and it's not difficult to see why! Recommended to young cat lovers, and to very young picture book audiences who enjoy stories about mischievous creatures. show less
Cookie's Week was one of my daughter's favorite books when she was a toddler, and we still treasure it. (She's in her twenties.) The black-and-white kitten gets into different trouble from Monday to Saturday, and, "Tomorrow is Sunday . . . Maybe Cookie will rest!" Maybe.
It was years before I figured out that the point of the book was teaching the days of the week. It's also something kids can relate to--Cookie knocks plants off the windowsill, upsets the trash can, climbs the show more curtains--generally making a mess of things. show less
It was years before I figured out that the point of the book was teaching the days of the week. It's also something kids can relate to--Cookie knocks plants off the windowsill, upsets the trash can, climbs the show more curtains--generally making a mess of things. show less
I truly enjoyed this book. The plot of the story could have not been any more fun! I would guess that this book is for the lower reading levels by its word usage and vocabulary it contained. The bigger picture is for the benefit of learning new words in a repetitive way. The sentences were repetitive in this way: “On Tuesday, Cookie did this and there were some type of mess everywhere!” Cookie fell in the toilet, knocked a plant over and spread dirt everywhere. The illustrations were show more simple but usual in describing the scene. The color usage was more in pastel colors. I could see they used these so the pictures would not be too overbearing to the readers. The story was told in third person, which is very popular in children’s books. Children are used to being told a story in this way, so it will be easily understood. show less
A mischievous cat wreaks havoc on its household all week long.
The book wants us to think it's all cute, but watching the messes get made just makes me dislike cats even more.
Bah!
Dogs rule!
FOR REFERENCE:
Rated "Indifferent" in our old book database by Rod; rated "Good" by Adelia.
The book wants us to think it's all cute, but watching the messes get made just makes me dislike cats even more.
Bah!
Dogs rule!
FOR REFERENCE:
Rated "Indifferent" in our old book database by Rod; rated "Good" by Adelia.
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