| store | availability | item price | delivered | |
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| Amazon UK | ||||
| The Hut | ||||
| Sprint Books | ||||
| Blackwells | ||||
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| Base | ||||
| The Book Place | ||||
| WH Smith | ||||
| Pick a Book | ||||
| Global Investor | ||||
| Waterstones | ||||
| The Book People | ||||
| zavvi | ||||
| Play.com | ||||
| Another Bookshop | ||||
| History Bookshop | ||||
| Tesco Books | ||||
| BookFellas | ||||
| Foyles | ||||
| Samedaybooks |
Above you will see price and availability details for Green Eggs and Ham by Dr. Seuss from the leading UK book stores.
To allow you to quickly compare prices, the stores are arranged in order of delivered price, cheapest first. Click on a store name to buy this book or to view further details.
| Book Details / Review - supplied by Amazon UK |
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This timeless Dr. Seuss classic was first published in 1960, and has been delighting readers ever since. Sam-I-Am is as persistent as a telemarketer, changing as many variables as possible in the hopes of convincing the nameless sceptic that green eggs and ham are a delicacy to be savoured. He tries every manner of presentation with this nouvelle cuisine--in a house, with a mouse, in a box, with a fox, with a goat, on a boat--to no avail. Then finally, finally the doubter caves in under the tremendous pressure exerted by the tireless Sam-I-Am. And guess what? Well, you probably know what happens, but even after reading Green Eggs and Ham for the thousandth time, the climactic realization that green eggs and ham are "so good, so good, you see" is still a rush. As usual, kids will love Dr. Seuss's wacky rhymes and whimsical illustrations--and this time, they might even be so moved as to finally take a taste of their broccoli. (Ages 4 to 8) |
| Books Related to Green Eggs and Ham Dr. Seuss - ISBN: 0007158467 |
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View other editions of Green Eggs and Ham. |
| Customer Reviews |
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Buy for people you hate - Rated Seuss achieves so much with so little - Rated Everyone should own his entire collection!! - Rated Green I've seen, green I've been - Rated Who wouldn't find it appetising? And in that dream a wonder starts The premise here is most absurd Just a simple tale of love Happy birthday to you this day With some weird dye, an Irish egg? So now, dear friend, go buy the book And may you be just who you are If Dr. Seuss is best known as the author of 'The Cat in the Hat', this text is a very close second. Its simple rhyme scheme and vocabulary is a perfect exemplar of Seussian construction, making it delightful for both children and adults. The vocabulary expands from that of 'The Cat in the Hat', making this almost a stealth-educational tool -- stealth in that children don't realise they're learning, and often adults don't realise that the playful use of language is educational. This is a must for every child's library. They needn't be named Sam. Dr. Seuss explores the principle of "try it, you'll like it" - Rated The protagonist of "Green Eggs and Ham" expresses the fact that he does not like Sam-I-am, so when Sam-I-am asks him if he likes green eggs and ham the response is also a negative. The equating of the green eggs and ham with Sam-I-am is extended through a logical progression of places (here or there), circumstances (in a house with a mouse or in a box with a fox), to hyperbolic proportions (in a car on a boat with a goat on a train in the rain). Despite the insistence of Sam-I-am that the protagonist might enjoy the green eggs and ham if only he were to try them, it is not a compromise position is worked out (trying the green eggs and ham in exchange for end to being pestered to death) that the story reaches its climax and resolution. While I appreciate the importance of the idea that somebody should try something before they dismiss it (a principle that applies to not only food but theatrical releases and political candidates), I do want to point out that many years after my childhood, during which time the information would have been of prime importance, scientists established that different things do indeed taste differently to different people. So it is possible not to like green eggs and ham (or spinach, for example), and not be a repudiation of the life work of Dr. Seuss. But you do have to at least give strange food a chance before you take an absolute position against eating it under any and all conceivable circumstances. |
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