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Nadia Shireen

Author of Yeti and the Bird

30 Works 775 Members 26 Reviews

About the Author

Includes the name: Nadia Shireen

Series

Works by Nadia Shireen

Yeti and the Bird (2013) 159 copies, 3 reviews
Good Little Wolf (2011) 120 copies, 8 reviews
Grimwood (2021) 80 copies, 4 reviews
Barbara Throws A Wobbler (2021) — Author — 76 copies
The Baby That ROARED (2012) — Illustrator — 60 copies, 3 reviews
The Bumblebear (2016) 56 copies
Billy and the Beast (2018) 38 copies
Hey, Presto! (2012) 29 copies, 3 reviews
Billy and the Dragon (2019) 24 copies
The Cow Who Fell to Earth (2017) 20 copies
Grimwood: Let the Fur Fly! (2022) 16 copies, 1 review
Geoffrey Gets the Jitters (2023) 12 copies
Grimwood: Party Animals (2024) 10 copies, 1 review
Billy and the Pirates (2022) 9 copies, 1 review
Grimwoud (2023) 2 copies
A l'école des abeilles (2016) 2 copies
Grimwood 5 (2025) 2 copies
Lola y el monstruo (2019) 2 copies
Le renard polaire (2016) 1 copy
L'ours polaire (2016) 1 copy
Le yéti et l'oiseau (2018) 1 copy
Lola y el dragón (2019) 1 copy
Le manchot empereur (2016) 1 copy
¡Por los pelos! (Grimwood ; 2) (2023) 1 copy, 1 review

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Gender
female

Members

Reviews

27 reviews
I like foxes, I like children's books, I was hoping this one would be a winner.

But I am much too old to be the target demographic, and the humour fell flat for me. It is very silly, and so you really need to be in it for the humour and not for the charactorisation or plot. The foxes are just not very foxy. They have mobile phones and talent shows, and I'm all for a bit of suspension of disbelief, but Grimwood seems both to be a place where foxes and rabbits can be friends with each other and show more put on a play together and a place where named characters who are mice can be casually eaten by an eagle.

Also, I thought the charactorisation of the Bad Guy was lazy, and used a lot of 'anything femme is bad', with being called 'princess' and not liking mud and liking satin sheets. The story is that she's bad because she doesn't like sharing nicely with the foxes, but actually the set up as presented is only the foxes can eat from the blue bin, and cats have to eat from the green bin, it is definitely uncomfortably 'seperate but equal' and I like less apartheid in my children's books.

Anyway, I am clearly a bit too humourless and overthinking and woke for this book, and I hope it finds many readers who enjoy it more than I do!
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This riff on Little Red Riding Hood and the Three Little Pigs starts as a cute and humorous little tweak on modernized fairy tales but takes a sudden turn into Grimm territory with a dark and shocking twist ending that will have you turning the last couple pages back and forth again and again, sure that what you see cannot be what really happened. But, yeah, she went there.

You might want to preview before reading to your particular tot.
Silliness, adventure, friendship, and all sorts of unexpected mishaps and moments create tons of ridiculous humor with animals to root for.

Ted and Nancy are sibling foxes, who lived in the city until a very obnoxious Princess Buttons (spoiled-to-the-max-cat) forces them to move to the Grimwood forest and stay out of her sight. Luckily, the great outdoors isn't quite as grim as its name. Although they're off to a rough start, have tons to discover, and are still running from a ridiculous cat, show more Ted and Nancy are in for all sorts of excitement...in the most unexpected ways.

While this is a book with all sorts of animals, it is by no means a book just for animal fans. There is snappy dialogue, hilarious back-and-forths, edge-of-the-seat tension, and even heart. It's wacky and yet, holds so much more as Ted and Nancy have to deal with all sorts of situations around them, while also battling usual sibling problems. The other creatures add everything from help to irritation to threatening moments, and each of these has a very distinct personality, which pops off the page. And that with a guarantee of constant laughs and snorts.

The illustrations add to the humor and are sprinkled in generously. While the first pages had me wondering if it will be carried by illustrations, this is a true chapter book with tons of visual fun. The text sticks at a reading level, which requires a surety of words and strengthens vocabulary here and there. It's a read to enjoy and launches off the series in the right way. I received a complimentary copy and was surprised by how much adventure accompanies the humor.
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Der keine Fuchs Ted und seine große Schwester Nancy leben in der Großen Stadt. Als sie den Zorn der bösen Katze Prinzessin Pinöckel auf sich ziehen, flüchten sie in den Grimmwald. Dort sind sie zwar sicher vor der Katze, aber treffen auf einige sehr spezielle und merkwürdige Tiere. Der kleine Ted findet endlich Freunde und Nancy macht eine Entdeckung.

Das Buch ist ein riesiger Spaß! Die Figuren sind herrlich komisch und haben alle (Buchzitat:) „eine Schraube locker“. Logik oder show more irgend eine Form von Realismus sollte dabei nicht erwartet werden. Die sprechenden Tiere tun und erleben Dinge, die ich aus keiner anderen Kinder-Tiergeschichte kenne.

Unterstützt wird diese verrückte Geschichte durch einen Nebenerzähler, der Hintergrundinformationen liefert, und witzige Illustrationen. Sie wirken eher skizzenhaft, dadurch aber ganz besonders passend zu dem unglaublichen Abenteuer, das Ted und Nancy erleben.

Obwohl ich ein großer Fan von Katzen bin, ist mir die Prinzessin in diesem Buch ausnahmsweise gänzlich unsympathisch.

Klare Leseempfehlung für klein und groß und alle, die Tiere mögen. Ich bin sicher, dass Eltern ihre Freude beim Vorlesen haben!
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Associated Authors

Anne Krief Traduction

Statistics

Works
30
Members
775
Popularity
#32,828
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
26
ISBNs
112
Languages
7

Charts & Graphs