
Nancy Hall (1)
Author of The Big Enough Helper
For other authors named Nancy Hall, see the disambiguation page.
Works by Nancy Hall
The big little golden book of knock-knocks and other jokes (A Big little golden book) (1987) 28 copies
M Is For Mouse 3 copies
All Around Me 1 copy
SNOOPY Y LOS OPUESTOS #00238 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 20th century
- Gender
- female
- Places of residence
- Boston, Massachusetts, USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- Massachusetts, USA
Members
Reviews
little girl helps her father at with the laundry. Good book to talk about help. Gave it a 4 because of the illustration. Book is from the 1970's
From School Library Journal
PreSchool-Grade 1-Two eggs are whisked away in a terrible storm and settle in a bank beside a river. When a baby alligator hatches from the first one, he is anxious to meet his soon-to-be brother or sister. Shortly thereafter, a snowy egret hatches, and the two become Spike (for his spiky alligator back) and Mike (a rhyming name is just as good as a family resemblance). Unable to agree on a location for their home, they finally decide on a two-story tree house at show more the edge of the water and live there happily ever after. The simple story about belonging communicates that a family is not just a matter of genetic ties, but that very different individuals can live together. Unfortunately, the writing and the illustrations lack the pizzazz that could carry this book beyond a good lesson. The prose is flat, as are the illustrations, which are printed on dull paper stock and executed in a style reminiscent of the "Golden Books." This title can't compete with Janell Cannon's remarkable Stellaluna (Harcourt, 1993), or Holly Keller's Horace (Greenwillow, 1991), an adoption book with a similar theme.
Lynn Cockett, Nutley Public Library, NJ
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title. show less
PreSchool-Grade 1-Two eggs are whisked away in a terrible storm and settle in a bank beside a river. When a baby alligator hatches from the first one, he is anxious to meet his soon-to-be brother or sister. Shortly thereafter, a snowy egret hatches, and the two become Spike (for his spiky alligator back) and Mike (a rhyming name is just as good as a family resemblance). Unable to agree on a location for their home, they finally decide on a two-story tree house at show more the edge of the water and live there happily ever after. The simple story about belonging communicates that a family is not just a matter of genetic ties, but that very different individuals can live together. Unfortunately, the writing and the illustrations lack the pizzazz that could carry this book beyond a good lesson. The prose is flat, as are the illustrations, which are printed on dull paper stock and executed in a style reminiscent of the "Golden Books." This title can't compete with Janell Cannon's remarkable Stellaluna (Harcourt, 1993), or Holly Keller's Horace (Greenwillow, 1991), an adoption book with a similar theme.
Lynn Cockett, Nutley Public Library, NJ
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title. show less
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Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 21
- Members
- 296
- Popularity
- #79,167
- Rating
- 3.6
- Reviews
- 2
- ISBNs
- 91










