
Bernice Myers
Author of It Happens to Everyone
About the Author
Works by Bernice Myers
The Safest Place 1 copy
CHICKEN FEATHERS by Bernice Meyers, A HOLT BASIC READING SYSTEM SATELLITE BOOK, LEVEL 8 (1973) 1 copy
Six Foolish Fishermen 1 copy
NOT THIS BEAR 1 copy
Puss in Boots #507 1 copy
Chicken Feathers 1 copy
Ding-a-Ling Big Book 1 copy
Olivier l'ours savant 1 copy
Associated Works
How Joe the Bear and Sam the Mouse Got Together (1965) — Illustrator, some editions — 98 copies, 1 review
Favourite Goodnight Stories (The Three Bears, Cinderella, The Gingerbread Man, Puss-in-Boots, The Elves and the Shoemaker) (1959) — Illustrator — 12 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 20th century
- Gender
- female
- Education
- Brooklyn College
- Occupations
- illustrator of children's books
- Organizations
- Authors and Publishers Association
Book Publishing Professionals
Books & Writers
Childrens Book Illustrators and Authors
Children's Publishing
Fiction Writer's Guild - Relationships
- Myers, Lou (husband)
- Nationality
- USA
- Places of residence
- Paris, France
New York, New York, USA
Westchester, New York, USA - Associated Place (for map)
- New York, USA
Members
Reviews
Bundled in a fur coat and matching fur hat, Little Herman trudges off to see his Aunt Gert. Crossing the forest he is mistaken for a cousin by a bear and taken back to the cave where the other bears receive him like family. The boy does everything he can to convince the bears that he isn't a bear – he eats with a spoon, stands on his head, ties his shoelace – but nothing convinces the bears until the boy does the unthinkable: he refuses to hunker down for hibernation. Pulling off his show more coat and hat, the boy is revealed and finally convinces the bears he is not one of them. A hasty depature follows.
Myers art was the draw for me here, but I like some of the thornier aspects of the story as well. Her make crayon scribbles of brown to suggest fur with a few simple details added in ink give the illustration a very loose, kid-like feel. It's very gestural and expressionistic without being heavy. As for the story, there's a bit of that childlike fantasy to the idea of a boy being able to hang out with bears and not be in any sort of real danger. There's never the sense that he has to get away or run for his life, only that he really enjoys being a boy and not being a bear.
Of course this book couldn't be written today. The idea of a fur coat, or a boy wearing one, wouldn't fly. And putting a boy in peril with a wild animal, that sends the wrong message in a world were even safety warning tags have to have safety warnings.
Aside from the illustrations, the best thing about this book for me is how simple and entertaining it is, and well-written. I can't usually make this statement for contemporary picture books written by illustrators. So often new books seem to be overly complicated and written with no feel for story. I'll keep holding out hope for newer picture books, but in the meantime there are fine books from the past like this. show less
Myers art was the draw for me here, but I like some of the thornier aspects of the story as well. Her make crayon scribbles of brown to suggest fur with a few simple details added in ink give the illustration a very loose, kid-like feel. It's very gestural and expressionistic without being heavy. As for the story, there's a bit of that childlike fantasy to the idea of a boy being able to hang out with bears and not be in any sort of real danger. There's never the sense that he has to get away or run for his life, only that he really enjoys being a boy and not being a bear.
Of course this book couldn't be written today. The idea of a fur coat, or a boy wearing one, wouldn't fly. And putting a boy in peril with a wild animal, that sends the wrong message in a world were even safety warning tags have to have safety warnings.
Aside from the illustrations, the best thing about this book for me is how simple and entertaining it is, and well-written. I can't usually make this statement for contemporary picture books written by illustrators. So often new books seem to be overly complicated and written with no feel for story. I'll keep holding out hope for newer picture books, but in the meantime there are fine books from the past like this. show less
This is a sweet little story. The chickens behave in the same way that a group of ladies would act. The different personalities will make anyone chuckle. It is written for young children while the adult reading it will also enjoy the story. The only thing that was odd to me was the chickens working in the restaurant serving egg dishes. The characters are human like in their personalities so it almost felt like a mother serving up her child. Not quite that intense, but a bit unsettling.
This is a male, modern day take on Cinderella. It made me chuckle to see the mustached fairy godfather. The difference is the ending. In Cinderella she goes off with the Prince to live happily ever after. In this story, the ending makes me think Sidney Rella was sitting in his office fantasizing about football.
I knew things were off to a bad start when the book began with the shocking reveal of Little Dog not knowing Big Dog was his friend, or even what a “friend” is at all. What was their relationship before this was explained to him??? I need more backstory.
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Statistics
- Works
- 48
- Also by
- 21
- Members
- 1,011
- Popularity
- #25,499
- Rating
- 3.7
- Reviews
- 19
- ISBNs
- 64
- Languages
- 2













