Author picture

Mathilde Stein

Author of Brave Ben

16 Works 151 Members 7 Reviews

Works by Mathilde Stein

Brave Ben (2005) 44 copies, 1 review
The Child Cruncher (2007) 29 copies
Mine! (2006) 22 copies, 3 reviews
Dear Daisy Dunnington (2012) 15 copies, 1 review
Monstersong (2007) 9 copies, 1 review
De nieuwe Sint (2008) 7 copies
Vuurtorenbeer (2023) 6 copies
De weg naar terug (2022) 5 copies
Maksie (2023) 4 copies, 1 review
La canzone del mostro (2006) 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1969
Gender
female
Nationality
Netherlands
Birthplace
Netherlands
Associated Place (for map)
Netherlands

Members

Reviews

9 reviews
Like Mathilde Stein's heroine of The Child Cruncher, Charlotte takes things as they come and is never at a loss. So when she finds a little white ghost in her bed, she's not at all surprised. He turns out to be quite a selfish little ghost, and the only word he knows if "mine". But with Charlotte's firm guidance, he learns it's more fun to play when you share!

Although this is a ghost story, it's not really something you'd put in your Halloween or holiday books. The emphasis isn't on the show more ghost, but on Charlotte's matter-of-fact acceptance of his presence and her straight-faced way of dealing with the ghost's demands. When the ghost goes home, Charlotte misses him - but he's learned quite a few things from her, as she discovers!

Mies van Hout's art is comfortingly scratchy and textured and her minimalist faces express emotions with just a twitch of the mouth and a shift of the ghost's little dot eyes. The combination of full-page spreads and smaller inset illustrations breaks up the longer sections of text and will hold the attention of children from the surprising beginning to the satisfying end.

Verdict: Recommended. Hand this one to parents who want books on sharing, to kids who like ghost stories that aren't too creepy, and to fans of The Child Cruncher.
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Mine! Is about a girl named Charlotte who one day stumbles upon a ghost in her bed. She attempts to befriend the ghost, but everything the ghost touched he yelled "Mine". The ghost could clearly not share. Charlotte and they ghost play together everyday and finally the ghost learns how to share, well for the most part. Until a man comes knocking at the door describing a missing ghost from his castle and Charlotte simply says my ghost is nice and he shares so the man leaves. The nest day the show more ghost is gone and there is note to Charlotte that says "yours". The ghost finally learned how to share. I read this book to a group of second graders and they loved it. I got a lot of positive feedback and it went over well. show less
About a boy who is afraid to wear his flowered overalls, among other things -- he gets help from a tree in the forest. Along the way to the magic tree, he meets a witch, a dragon, a spider, and three skeletons. Very cute.
Genre
Picture books for children
Translations
Theme
Learning to share
Subject
Children
Friendship
Ghosts
Girls
Personal conduct
Selfishness
Sharing
Supernatural
Toleration
Toleration in children

Lists

Awards

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Associated Authors

Jan Jutte Illustrator
Mies van Hout Illustrator
Chuck Groenink Illustrator

Statistics

Works
16
Members
151
Popularity
#137,934
Rating
3.8
Reviews
7
ISBNs
31
Languages
7

Charts & Graphs