5/22/2011

Moving Pictures: Good night, Bunny little by Emily Hawkins

Little Bunny and dusty squirrel played together if long shadows are deepening through the clearing in the forest. Bunny is a little afraid of the dark and decides to head home as quickly it can blow up. But what is this just before shade? Oh, it's just Freddie Fox Cub.


"IT IS DARKER AND YOU ME AFRAID!"

HE DID Y NOTHING TO BE FRIGHTENED OF, FREDDY REPLIED. "I LOVE THE NIGHT". IT IS THE BEST TIME FOR DIGGING! »


Easy for Freddie to say. It has no predators to worry about time-dark. Again, Freddy begins to dig, and little Bunny, who loves burrowing, can not too, resist to the fun. Soon the dirt flies and the Moon is rising and little Bunny forgets his fear of the dark. One by one, little Bunny meets with nocturnal animals of the forest: a troop of marmots travel, dance, and Daisy deer stops to see what is down with the two diggers. Suddenly, there was a frightening sound.

Silhouette by the starry sky, Olive Owl has some tips not sunny for Bunny...


"LITTLE RABBITS SHOULD NOT BE IN IT ONE NIGHT." WHY CAN'T I SHOW YOU THE WAY HOME? »

And, of course, the mother worried and father Bunny are willing to allow their runaway House shortly for a snuggle and finally a welcome end, but sunset.

Emily Hawkins' new good night, little Bunny: A Changing - Picture Book (Changing Picture Books) offers a friendly text with no surprises in the familiar bunny AWOL genus but illustrations lovely by John Butler, done in pastels mild chronic spring of this adventure just nicely, and the "change-picture book" format works especially well for this tale shortly.


Cover cut shows a bunny appropriately adorable rabbit, but when the book is open to the title page of the movement of mobile pages to show little Bunny nicely nestled with his parents. The logon page showing Dusty and Bunny moves when the flap formed by the tree of the lifting of panes in the foreground on the right opens to move the scene to show Freddie Fox Cub emerging from the darkness and ready to play. Another engaging design shifts the view of Little Bunny and Daisy deer on one of the Olive Owl perched on his flank with night sky behind it.


As a book of Council for the very young, just old enough to attend the photos, this moving image format is sure to Wow, although slightly older will particularly appreciate practical technology of the book, which puts them in charge of the definition of the story in motion.

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