Author picture

C. Drew Lamm

Author of Sea Lion Roars

12+ Works 622 Members 8 Reviews

Works by C. Drew Lamm

Sea Lion Roars (1997) 147 copies, 1 review
Cottontail at Clover Crescent (1995) 132 copies, 1 review
Screech Owl at Midnight Hollow (1996) 115 copies, 1 review
Prog Frince: A Mixed-Up Tale (1999) 40 copies, 1 review
Bittersweet (2003) 34 copies
Gauchada (2002) 30 copies, 2 reviews
Pirates (2001) 22 copies, 1 review
Cottontail's Dance (2001) 2 copies, 1 review

Associated Works

My America: A Poetry Atlas of the United States (2000) — Contributor — 714 copies, 10 reviews
Stay True: Short Stories for Strong Girls (1998) — Contributor — 117 copies, 1 review

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1955-03-14
Gender
male

Members

Reviews

8 reviews
I loved the idea of following a well-made gift through many lives, but I found myself wanting more of a story to follow. I enjoyed the images and descriptions of far-off places and unfamiliar words. There was a wonderful dreamlike quality to the unfolding descriptions that fit with the idea of the gaucho carving as he sings, but ultimately it left me wanted more as I turned the pages. This would be a wonderful book to have in a classroom for students to invent their own stories or share an show more illustration read. show less
The Prog Frince is an interesting take on the Frog Prince in which the Frog Prince must tell his tale to our main character Jane in order to turn back into a prince. As it is eventually revealed, Jane is actually Jaylee, the girl the Prince loved. The Prince's father aquires a potion that made Jaylee forget everything and turned the prince into a frog. I enjoyed this telling of the story. The Prince wants to marry Jaylee, but his father finds that to be unsuitable because Jaylee works in show more their stables. He would have married her anyway, and I think that is just a sweet message about love being more important than titles and status. I also enjoyed Jane AKA Jaylee, because she initally hates make believe and fairytales, and ends up already being part of one. The illustrations are colorful and detailed, nicely showing the story's details. Overall, I really enjoyed this book and think that young readers would too. show less
Leaving her babies sheltered in a warm blanket of leaves, hungry Cottontail ventures into the backyard to nibble on clover. While feeding, she encounters another rabbit and the two leap and play together. Reviewed by the Smithsonian Institution for accuracy, Cottontail at Clover Crescent is a fun and informative story with beautifully detailed illustrations.
This was a strong piece of nonfiction cleverly woven together with a narrative thread. It would be a good selection for anyone interested in instructing on screech owl life cycles or narrative nonfiction. Though it is largely focused on one period of a screech owl's life it effectively interweaves fact with story throughout.

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Statistics

Works
12
Also by
2
Members
622
Popularity
#40,475
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
8
ISBNs
40

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