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Type of bind: Hardcover
EAN num: 9780061128561
ISBN number: 0061128562
Label: HarperFestival
Manufacturer: HarperFestival
Quantity: 1
Page Count: 32
Printing Date: October 01, 2007
Publishing house: HarperFestival
Age index: Ages 4-8
Release Date: September 25, 2007
Sale Popularity Level: 48634
Studio: HarperFestival
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Editor's Notes and Comments:
Product Description:
Now you can enjoy the bestselling If You Give a Mouse a Cookie in miniature with your very own Mouse Cookie CD!
The Mouse Cookie CD includes:
'The Mouse Cookie'
This high-energy pop song will make you get up and dance!
A reading!
Actress Carol Kane reads If You Give a Mouse a Cookie to you.
'Wrong Words'
This silly song is sure to inspire lots of goofy guesses and giggles.
Who Made This Book?
Learn some fun facts about Laura Numeroff and Felicia Bond.
Fill-in-the-Blanks
An interactive game led by Carol Kane.
Read Along!
This reading of the book has turn-the-page beeps so you can read along.
Amazon.com Review:
Who would ever suspect that a tiny little mouse could wear out an energetic young boy? Well, if you're going to go around giving an exuberantly bossy rodent a cookie, you'd best be prepared to do one or two more favors for it before your day is through. For example, he'll certainly need a glass of milk to wash down that cookie, won't he? And you can't expect him to drink the milk without a straw, can you? By the time our hero is finished granting all the mouse's very urgent requests--and cleaning up after him--it's no wonder his head is becoming a bit heavy. Laura Joffe Numeroff's tale of warped logic is a sure-fire winner in the giggle-generator category. But concerned parents can rest assured, there's even a little education thrown in for good measure: underneath the folly rest valuable lessons about cause and effect. Felicia Bond's hilarious pictures are full of subtle, fun details. Fans will be happy to know that this dynamic author-illustrator pair teamed up again for If You Give a Moose a Muffin and If You Give a Pig a Pancake. (Great read aloud, ages 4 to 8) --Emilie Coulter
User popularity level:

Rated by buyers
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I bought this book because I am designing the costumes for a play with a mouse in it and this little face is precious. My own grandchildren are beyond the age where this book would be read to them, but it fits perfectly in my collection of children's books. Any Mom or Dad with a small child should pick up this series of stories. They are classic and delightful. The illustrations are wonderful.
Rated by buyers
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Not all children's books are created equal. What's nice about this book is that it's easy for beginning readers but yet enjoyable at the same time. That's not easy to find in children's books. With only about one sentence per page, it moves quickly, the children feel they are reading and not bogged down on one page.
The story about a mouse that wanted a cookie and then all the things that go with it really captivates the young audience. My children, age 4 and 7, both enjoy reading it or having it read to them over and over -- and I don't mind!
Rated by buyers
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This in my opinion is up there with Goodnight Moon and The Hungry Caterpillar...my son loves this book. We actually had to buy this a couple times, because the very first copy was paperback, bad decision for a toddler, then we bought a used hardback copy on here, and it has held up great!
Rated by buyers
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This story revolves around a mouse who demands ever-increasing amounts of consumer items from an ever-increasingly exasperated boy. Cute pictures hide a terrible message of selfishness and class warfare boiling beneath American society. The whole book devolves into a crude political cartoon, where the boy symbolizes an innocent and hard-working tax payer while the mouse typifies a vile depiction of how the wealthy (or at least those who perceive themselves as wealthy) view the poor and needy. While the boy gives more and more to the mouse the mouse in turn asks more and more of the boy. It paints the situation as unjust and the mouse having little reason to ask for these handouts.
Terrible book. Don't read it to your kids.
Rated by buyers
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It was good because the end was the opposit of the beginning. You have to read the book to see what I mean. I'd tell you, but that would ruin the ending - review by Rick, age 6
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