The Wolf and the House Dog
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Authors
Kang, Yoon-Chung
Kim, Bok-Tae
Issue Date
2000
Volume
Issue
Type
Book, Whole
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Abstract
I first saw a wall-full of this series at Kyobo Book in Seoul in July, '04. I bought one copy, came home, and worked to order the full set of thirty booklets, workbooks, and audio cassettes from the publisher. Each set cost 9,800 Won. I have divided that cost among the book (6800 Won), booklet (1000 Won), and cassette (2000 Won). The colored booklet features twenty-eight thick, sturdy pages and excellent color reproduction. The art is cartoon-like, simple, and direct. Bok-Tae presents a wonderfully emaciated wolf. This story begins when the wolf fails to catch a rabbit. The dog, lost from the village, asks if the wolf has been crying, since his eyes are red. He cannot answer directly. The paltriness of the house dog's tasks is presented well. The departing wolf says I would rather be hungry than be chained. Nothing is more valuable than freedom.
Description
Citation
Publisher
Alific Language Plus
SISA Education
SISA Education
License
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Issue
PubMed ID
DOI
Identifier
6919 (Access ID)
