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Roar Book

Roar
Roar, , Roar has a rating of 3.5 stars
   2 Ratings
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Roar, , Roar
3.5 out of 5 stars based on 2 reviews
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Digital Copy
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  • Roar
  • Written by author Tor Freeman
  • Published by Candlewick Press, August 1902
  • This whimsical day in the life of a young child is sure to bring smiles to every parent who has doubled as zookeeper - and to all children who like to pretend.ROAR! Lotte greets the day as a lion, just like the one in the book that her mom
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This whimsical day in the life of a young child is sure to bring smiles to every parent who has doubled as zookeeper - and to all children who like to pretend.

ROAR! Lotte greets the day as a lion, just like the one in the book that her mom read last night. When Mom starts her sewing, it’s time to turn into a monkey, while watering plants is clearly a job for a bear. At dinnertime it’s best to be a crocodile - since everyone knows crocodiles don’t like vegetables - but who will Lotte be when it’s time to be carried to bed?

Publishers Weekly

Inspired by her bedtime storybook, young Lotte assumes the identities of six different animals during the course of the following day. "Roar!" becomes her call of the wild whether she is posing as lion, monkey or elephant. Like Janice May Udry's Is Susan Here?, Freeman (Pet Wash), in a similar premise, imagines Lotte as actually becoming the animal of her imagination (albeit a very cuddly version of the species), and Mom cheerfully goes along. She plays hide-and-seek with Lotte-the-elephant and gives Lotte-the-Bear a ride on the vacuum cleaner. But when the girl becomes an uncooperative crocodile, Mom's amusement wanes. "Crocodiles don't like to be carried upstairs. Roar!" Lotte booms at bedtime. "I'm not sure I like crocodiles," says Lotte's mother. Tensions ease when the child returns once more to her amenable girl-self at least until lights out (a final spread shows her roaring as a penguin). The tidy acrylic, watercolor and pencil drawings exude an endearing coziness, and the visual variety (from double-page spreads to sequential spot illustrations) nicely counterpoints the unadorned, concise text. But while children should get a kick out of Lotte's one-kid menagerie, some budding nature lovers may wonder why she can only manage a single animal sound. Ages 3-6. (Aug.) Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.


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