Overview / 简介: |
Sylvie, a rabbit, and True, a water snake, are best friends. They live together in a small apartment on a quiet street in a big city. Like a lot of best friends, Sylvie and True are different in many ways. Sylvie sleeps in a bed; True sleeps in the bathtub. Sylvie leaves the apartment by going through the door and down the stairs; True slides out the window and down a drainpipe. But, of course, they have things in common, too Â- they both love food and bowling Â- and together they make quite a team. Told in four short and easy-to-read chapters, and illustrated in warm watercolors, this is a sweet and funny story about the give-and-take of friendship.
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From Organization / 国外机构评价: |
"Sure to bring a smile." —School Library Journal
"The pacing of the narratives...helps this charmer do double-duty as a bedtime book." —Publishers Weekly |
Foreign Customer Review / 国外客户评价: |
David McPhail's "Sylvie and True" (2007) is a familiar story of friendship between two dissimilar animals, but McPhail's soft watercolor and pen/ink illustrations and humor set it above the rest.
McPhail gives us a sort of good animal/mischievous animal duo: Sylvie, a rabbit, is competent and fairly ordinary without being straight-laced, and is always a good friend. True, a giant water snake, is, well... to put it kindly, not as competent, and she has a mischievous streak as long as her tail. She delights in her rain forest ways (e.g., sleeping in a bathtub "with just her nose and tail sticking out of the water"), and particularly loves to take advantage of her huge length and two prominent front teeth. In story one (there are four interlinked mini-chapters), she tries to scare Mr. Gomez; he pretends that he's afraid. The entire book is full of good-natured fun, and McPhail excels at both goofy fun and dry wit:
"'Oh True,' he [Mr. Gomez] would say, 'you frightened me so!'
'That's because I am a frightful, wild beast,' said True.
'You certainly are,' said Mr. Gomez, but he couldn't keep from laughing." He fondly rubs the smiling True's neck.
In the second story, True decides to switch roles and make dinner for Sylvie. However, she forgets that she's left dinner cooking on the stove! Smoke fills the kitchen and pours into the next room where True is watching television.
Under a picture of a smoke filled room, McPhail writes, "After a while, the picture was hard to see...She [True] decided that something must be wrong with the TV." Sylvie returns: "Something's burning and the smoke detector is going off,' Sylvie shouted. Then True remembred. 'I think supper is burning,' she said." It's subtle, but the accompanying pictures and your expressive voice will elicit laughter.
The two other stories are "Sylvie and True's Bowling Night" (wherein True uses her length to MAYBE cheat a little at bowling), and the short but sweet, "Bedtime." After Sylvie reads to True, the two friends decide to go to sleep--Sylvie in her bed and True in her tub. They're both glad, each says, that they're friends.
Sylvie and True benefits from McPhails soft, vignetted drawings, and his unfailing sense of humor. While he presents the two animal friends as peers, it's clear that Sylvie is the adult figure. At first I thought True was somewhat on the "un-cute" side, but her appearance grew on me. (That's how it is with those giant water snakes.) Kids will enjoy uncluttered pictures, the small story format, and the unusual hijinks of True. |
About the Author / 作者介绍: |
DAVID MCPHAIL has written and illustrated many books, including The Puddle, and is the illustrator of the New York Times bestseller When Sheep Sleep by Laura Numeroff. He lives in Rye, New Hampshire. |
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