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Joan M. Lexau (1929–2023)

Author of Who Took the Farmer's Hat?

53+ Works 4,277 Members 37 Reviews

About the Author

Series

Works by Joan M. Lexau

Who Took the Farmer's Hat? (1963) 1,205 copies, 8 reviews
Go Away, Dog (1997) 1,022 copies, 3 reviews
Striped Ice Cream! (1968) 297 copies, 3 reviews
The Christmas Secret (1963) 189 copies, 1 review
The Very Hungry Bear (1998) 186 copies
The Spider Makes a Web (1979) 133 copies
Crocodile and Hen: A Bakongo Folktale (1969) 100 copies, 5 reviews
The Homework Caper (I Can Read Mystery) (1966) 91 copies, 1 review
That's Good, That's Bad (1963) 78 copies, 2 reviews
The Rooftop Mystery (1968) 64 copies
Olaf Reads (1961) 62 copies
Come Back, Cat (1983) 52 copies, 5 reviews
The Poison Ivy Case (1984) 42 copies
The Trouble with Terry (1974) 37 copies
Benjie (1964) 37 copies, 1 review
Archimedes Takes a Bath, (1969) — Author — 36 copies, 3 reviews
Trouble Will Find You (1994) 32 copies, 1 review
I Should Have Stayed in Bed (1965) 18 copies
Benjie on His Own (2002) 18 copies
The Dog Food Caper (1985) 18 copies
Row, Row, Row Your Boat (1997) 18 copies
Me Day (1971) 11 copies, 2 reviews
I'll tell on you (1976) 8 copies
Maria (2000) 7 copies
A kite over Tenth Avenue, (1967) 7 copies
T for Tommy (1971) 5 copies
Come! Sit! Stay! (1984) 5 copies
Jack and the beanstalk (1985) 4 copies
MILLICENT'S GHOST (1962) 2 copies
A house so big 2 copies
Mean Jean 1 copy
I hate Red Rover (1979) 1 copy

Associated Works

Cricket Magazine, Vol. 2, No. 6, February 1975 (1975) — Contributor — 7 copies
Cricket Magazine, Vol. 1, No. 5, January 1974 (1974) — Contributor — 6 copies
Cricket Magazine, Vol. 1, No. 8, April 1974 (1974) — Contributor — 5 copies
Cricket Magazine, Vol. 4, No. 8, April 1977 (1977) — Contributor — 2 copies

Tagged

animals (99) children (31) children's (60) children's books (14) children's fiction (16) Christmas (45) dog (15) dogs (46) E (14) early reader (19) easy reader (33) family (20) farm (113) farm animals (40) farmer (22) fiction (115) friendship (23) hat (19) hats (44) holidays (16) I (14) mystery (15) pets (33) picture book (98) realistic fiction (18) spiders (23) to-read (15) Valentine's Day (20) weather (24) wind (31)

Common Knowledge

Other names
Nodset, Joan L. (pseudonym)
Birthdate
1929-03-09
Date of death
2023-01-09
Gender
female
Occupations
children's book author
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
St. Paul, Minnesota, USA
Places of residence
Otisville, New York, USA
St. Paul, Minnesota, USA
New York, New York, USA
Place of death
St. Paul, Minnesota, USA
Associated Place (for map)
USA

Members

Reviews

42 reviews
I've frequently heard it said that kids can't, or won't, sit still like they used to. Now, there are a lot of different factors in this - electronics of course, and school schedules, and considering that we are now doing storytimes for babies whereas a few decades ago storytime was for elementary-aged kids. On top of that, quite a few of the picture books produced nowadays are extremely long and kids absolutely will not sit still for them! However, in my experience, toddlers and preschoolers show more will quite happily sit for even a lengthy story if it is a folktale or has a folktale-like cadence.

I don't remember where I originally heard this story; I probably read it as a child, but at some point I realized I needed it for storytime. I purchased an old and rather worn copy online and the kids LOVED it. They even liked my introduction, where I showed them "the mystery book" since it was missing its jacket!

Nevertheless, one can't fully enjoy a book unless you can recommend it to friends and colleagues, and with the only copy in my professional collection, kids coming to the library wanting the book I read in class are bound to be disappointing. So I was THRILLED when I found out that Prestel was republishing this gem!

The story is simple. Boy is exhausted, sitting on a rock, when Tiger shows up. Tiger tells him to run, so he can chase him and eat him, and Boy replies (in my favorite phrase of the book) "Eat me then...I have no more run in me." Tiger is curious, so Boy tells him the story of his adventures, with Tiger responding "That's good" and "That's bad" as one thing leads to another. It turns out, Boy is being chased by Rhino and a wild chase it's been!

Each spread is in dark blue with the shadow of green trees and the figures of Boy and Rhino acting out the story. In the forefront is the face of Boy, the storyteller, and Tiger, the listener, while the text runs on a white background strip below.

When Boy finally gets to the end of his story, there's an unexpected ending for Tiger and Boy's clever tale saves the day and that's good! For Boy at least...

This edition keeps the original art and text, although it's in a larger format than the original I have, which makes it a much better read-aloud. It adds some background information on the author and illustrator and compares the story to the Scheherazade and the Arabian Nights (the use of "virgin" was a little unneeded I think, good luck explaining that to any kids reading it on their own...) The only problem I've had with this story is explaining to kids that Boy is NOT wearing a diaper - I tell them he's wearing special shorts because he lives somewhere very hot.

Verdict: I am delighted to see this classic story back in print and in a lovely edition that's perfect for reading aloud. I can't wait for my friends to be able to share it with a whole new generation of kids, who I promise you WILL sit still for it!

ISBN: 9783791374192; This edition published March 2020 by Prestel; Review copy provided by publisher and added to my professional collection to replace my battered old copy; Purchased another copy for the general library; Included in our emergency virtual storytimes.
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I borrowed this early version of the popular sequential consequences story through inter-library loan. It is hilarious! Also delightful and still fresh and new.

A hungry tiger meets a little boy and tells him to run, since he is going to eat him! "I have no run left in me" declares the boy, and tells the tiger a lengthy story of how he has been running all day, trying to escape from a rhino. The tiger responds, "that's good!" or "that's bad" to each twist and turn in the story until....well, show more I won't tell you how the clever boy ends the story and escapes the tiger AND the rhino. The illustrations are bright and I love the way Aliki separated the different threads of the story and keeps the main characters viewing the action at the sides. As far as I can tell, this book is out of print, which is a real shame.

Verdict: I tested it on my preschool visits last week and the kids loved it, sitting in breathless anticipation through each flip of the plot. Maybe I can find a used copy somewhere....

ISBN: N/A; Published 1963 by Dial (out of print); Borrowed from the library; Added to my personal wishlist
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A simple short book under eighty pages long, with wacky goofy illustrations about how your horoscopes can be wrong, superstitions are silly, and how sometimes you have to run headfirst into trouble to save a life or help someone. This book is cute, relatively harmless, and a fun read. A boy wants a dog so bad he'll do anything, but then realizes doing what's right trumps getting what he wants.
I like reading this to 3rd graders for Valentine's Day. It brings up the question of bullying and the differences in expectations that boys and girls have of each other.

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Awards

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Associated Authors

Aliki Illustrator
Syd Hoff Illustrator
Fritz Siebel Illustrator
Don Bolognese Illustrator
Marilyn Hafner Illustrator
Kathy Wilburn Illustrator
Harvey Weiss Illustrator
Steven Kellogg Illustrator
Susanna Leigh Illustrator
Tomie dePaola Illustrator
Crosby Bonsall Illustrator
Paul Meisel Illustrator
Sue Lundgren Illustrator
Teri Weidner Illustrator
Sal Murdocca Illustrator

Statistics

Works
53
Also by
4
Members
4,277
Popularity
#5,875
Rating
3.9
Reviews
37
ISBNs
132
Languages
1

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