Fàbulas de Mayor a menor 3
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Authors
No Author
Issue Date
2012
Volume
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Type
Book, Whole
Language
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Abstract
Nacho reads to Tobi from this book -- in this number, outdoors. A full-page cartoon of them precedes each fable and follows the last fable. The latter applies the moral in the daily life of Nacho and Tobi. Those preceding a fable often have a relation to the fable itself. Before the first story, La cigarra y la hormiga, Nacho asks Tobi if he does not want to sit on the grass rather than on a rock. No, there's a cigarra. And? I don't smoke. The six fables here are GA, The Fox and the Lumberjack, DW, The Duck and the Snake, MM, and The Bear, the Monkey, and the Pig. After The Fox and the Lumberjack, Nacho stands over Tobi, flat on his face, and says It was only a lovetap. Tobi pronounces the moral: No niegues con tus actos lo que pregonas con tus palabras. At the beginning of DW, the dog scares the boys by practicing the language of my ancestors, i.e., howling. The Duck and the Snake is new to me and good. The duck is praising himself for being of the water, land, and air. The snake comes close and asks if he can swim like a fish. No. Can he run like a hare? No. Can he fly like an eagle? No. You do everything by halves! Before MM, Tobi gives a clue to the whole series. He has just fallen while carrying Nacho a glass of milk. When I learn to read, I will not need this anymore! Might the this be Nacho? Favors for Nacho? The bear knows he is a bad dancer when the pig applauds his dancing. Chanti's rendition of the falling milk-jug on 37 is fine. Fun with fables might be an apt subtitle for this series. These cartoons and fables would engage a young reader. Text and ballooned sayings in the illustrations complement each other in presenting the story. The closing design has Tobi begging Nacho to come back, and the dog saying What a character!
Description
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Publisher
Uranito Editores
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Volume
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PubMed ID
DOI
Identifier
10350 (Access ID)
