How Little Lori Visited Times Square
by Amos Vogel
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Lori wants to visit Times Square and has many adventures along the way.Tags
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Little Lori decides one day that he'd like to visit Times Square, and immediately sets out, only to find that come what may, he never seems to get there. The subway he takes leads him to South Ferry, the bus he rides leaves him at 242nd Street, and the taxi driver he hails kicks him out, when it turns out he doesn't have the money. All other avenues of transportation prove just as fruitless, leading him to sit down and cry. A helpful turtle then happens by, and learning the cause of his unhappiness, offers to take him to his destination. Turtles, of course, are notoriously slow, and the narrative concludes with the information that nobody has heard from Lori and his turtle friend since...
Leaving aside the question of why anyone would show more want to visit Times Square in the first place - this New Yorker considers it a penance having to pass through that part of the city! - I found How Little Lori Visited Times Square immensely entertaining. First published in 1963, and reprinted in this new edition in 1991, this tiny picture-book packs quite a punch. The humor rests not just upon Lori's continual misdirection, as he tries to navigate the big city, but also upon the interaction of text and image. I loved the fact that the helpful turtle speaks so slowly that there is only one word per page! I loved the warning about not walking on pigeons, in the bus scene, and found myself wondering if that was an inspiration for Mo Willems, in writing Don't Let the Pigeon Drive the Bus! With its open-ended conclusion - after all, Little Lori never does get where he is going! - I can imagine that this one won't appeal to everyone, but for those with a somewhat quirky sense of humor, it will have lots of charm. Recommended to those who enjoy stories with a somewhat bent sense of humor, as well as to all Maurice Sendak fans. show less
Leaving aside the question of why anyone would show more want to visit Times Square in the first place - this New Yorker considers it a penance having to pass through that part of the city! - I found How Little Lori Visited Times Square immensely entertaining. First published in 1963, and reprinted in this new edition in 1991, this tiny picture-book packs quite a punch. The humor rests not just upon Lori's continual misdirection, as he tries to navigate the big city, but also upon the interaction of text and image. I loved the fact that the helpful turtle speaks so slowly that there is only one word per page! I loved the warning about not walking on pigeons, in the bus scene, and found myself wondering if that was an inspiration for Mo Willems, in writing Don't Let the Pigeon Drive the Bus! With its open-ended conclusion - after all, Little Lori never does get where he is going! - I can imagine that this one won't appeal to everyone, but for those with a somewhat quirky sense of humor, it will have lots of charm. Recommended to those who enjoy stories with a somewhat bent sense of humor, as well as to all Maurice Sendak fans. show less
This book is about Little Lori who is trying everything she can to get to Times Square. The illustrator does a great job throughout this book at portraying the attitudes of the characters. On pages where Lori is excited and speaking quickly the words are all jumbled onto the page. As opposed to when the tortoise is speaking the sentences are spread throughout multiple pages giving theatrical cues to the reader. This book was a fun read and would recommend for a lesson plan.
This little old book is hysterical - especially the ending! I first saw it in Books Are Magic in Brooklyn.
I did not like this book. To me, the book really did not have a point to it. I really did not like how at the end Lori and the turtle just disappeared. This book seemed very depressing and I would never read it to children.
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A Child's Book Tour of New York City
57 works; 6 members
Author Information

2 Works 397 Members
Amos Vogel founded the Lincoln Center Film Department and was co-founder of the New York Film Festival which he ran until 1968. Over the years Vogel has served as Chairman of the American Selection Committee for the Cannes, Moscow, Berlin and Venice film festivals. He has taught at Harvard University, the New School for Social Research, New York show more University, and for several years at the University of Pennsylvania's Annenberg School. show less
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- Languages
- English
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- ASINs
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