| store | availability | item price | delivered | |
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| Amazon UK | ||||
| The Hut | ||||
| Sprint Books | ||||
| Blackwells | ||||
| WH Smith (collect in store) | ||||
| 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 If I Ran the Zoo: Yellow Back Book 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.
| Books Related to If I Ran the Zoo Dr. Seuss - ISBN: 0007169949 |
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View other editions of If I Ran the Zoo. |
| Customer Reviews |
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An Off-Target Look at Encouraging Creativity - Rated Review: In visiting the zoo, young Gerald McGrew expresses reservations about having an ordinary zoo. "I'd make a few changes." "I want something new!" "Let the animals go, and start over again." The illustration shows the cages being opened up with lions and tigers wandering off down the zoo paths . . . and not being returned to any appropriate place for them to live. Why is that a good example for children? Beats me! The bulk of the story involves young Gerald telling the zookeeper what he'd do instead, while Gerald imagines himself as the zookeeper. The bulk of the story involves concocting exotic animals from far-off lands and unusual ways to capture them. One of the things I liked about the story is that many of these animals are connected a little to real places or animals. That makes the process of creating them more obvious to a child. For example, the first exotic animal is a lion with at least ten legs, five on each side. The animals gradually veer away from the standard animals. Next, there's a "new sort-of-a-hen who roosts in another hen's topknot" and so forth so they are all stacked up on top of one another. Following that is an elephant-cat. At that point, the flights of fancy move further afield. He goes on a hunt for a "What-do-you-know" past the North Pole. In typical Dr Seuss fashion, the names are formed to help make the rhymes work better. You get flustards and bustards. Flustards also eat mustard with a sauce made of custard. In similar fashion, lunks come in a bucket from Nantucket. For those who watch closely, you'll be amused to see that there's a "Nerd" collected and illustrated here. One of my favorite hunts is the one for a Natch, in which it is necessary to cook a special meal to lure him from his high cave. By the time Gerald's done he concludes, "It's the gol-darndst zoo on the face of the earth!" The zoo's collection success he sees as a reflection of his own magnificence. The illustrations are the book's strength, because the drawings are usually much funnier than the rhymes. the illustrations are done in red, yellow, and blue to highlight the weirdness of the exotic animals. The verse and illustrations complement one another well. After you finish this story, think about how you could write new rhymes to make it a five-star book. With a little editing here and there, and an occasional added rhyme, you'll soon have a five-star collaboration with Dr. Seuss that you can proudly read to your child. Think of that! Focus creativity where it will expand the heart as well as the mind! An Off-Target Look at Encouraging Creativity - Rated Review: In visiting the zoo, young Gerald McGrew expresses reservations about having an ordinary zoo. "I'd make a few changes." "I want something new!" "Let the animals go, and start over again." The illustration shows the cages being opened up with lions and tigers wandering off down the zoo paths . . . and not being returned to any appropriate place for them to live. Why is that a good example for children? Beats me! The bulk of the story involves young Gerald telling the zookeeper what he'd do instead, while Gerald imagines himself as the zookeeper. The bulk of the story involves concocting exotic animals from far-off lands and unusual ways to capture them. One of the things I liked about the story is that many of these animals are connected a little to real places or animals. That makes the process of creating them more obvious to a child. For example, the first exotic animal is a lion with at least ten legs, five on each side. The animals gradually veer away from the standard animals. Next, there's a "new sort-of-a-hen who roosts in another hen's topknot" and so forth so they are all stacked up on top of one another. Following that is an elephant-cat. At that point, the flights of fancy move further afield. He goes on a hunt for a "What-do-you-know" past the North Pole. In typical Dr Seuss fashion, the names are formed to help make the rhymes work better. You get flustards and bustards. Flustards also eat mustard with a sauce made of custard. In similar fashion, lunks come in a bucket from Nantucket. For those who watch closely, you'll be amused to see that there's a "Nerd" collected and illustrated here. One of my favorite hunts is the one for a Natch, in which it is necessary to cook a special meal to lure him from his high cave. By the time Gerald's done he concludes, "It's the gol-darndst zoo on the face of the earth!" The zoo's collection success he sees as a reflection of his own magnificence. The illustrations are the book's strength, because the drawings are usually much funnier than the rhymes. the illustrations are done in red, yellow, and blue to highlight the weirdness of the exotic animals. The verse and illustrations complement one another well. After you finish this story, think about how you could write new rhymes to make it a five-star book. With a little editing here and there, and an occasional added rhyme, you'll soon have a five-star collaboration with Dr. Seuss that you can proudly read to your child. Think of that! Focus creativity where it will expand the heart as well as the mind! One Irish rock star can't be wrong - Rated If I Ran The Zoo gets thumbs up--two! - Rated Great book for children, with more Dr. Seussian creatures - Rated |
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