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   Book Info

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My Very First Encyclopedia with Winnie the Pooh and Friends: Animals  
Author: Staff of Disney Press
ISBN: 0786834080
Format: Handover
Publish Date: June, 2005
 
     
     
   Book Review


Book Description
Young children will enjoy accompanying Winnie the Pooh & Friends as they discover the amazing world of animals, learning where animals come from, how they grow, and how they live. This world of knowledge is communicated through stunning photography, charming illustrations, and simple, factual text.




My Very First Encyclopedia with Winnie the Pooh and Friends: Animals

ANNOTATION

Combining stunning photos, charming illustrations, and simple text, these first encyclopedias help children explore facts about nature and animals in an engaging and informative way.

FROM THE CRITICS

Children's Literature - Barbara L. Talcroft

Here come Pooh, Piglet, Tigger, and Owl (plus a few others) to introduce pre-schoolers to the world of living creatures, including mammals, birds, reptiles, sea creatures, and insects and spiders. This is a Disney production, part of its "My First Encyclopedia" series, which includes as well a volume called Nature. Parents and children should spend some time looking through it together, as there is quite a lot of commentary that will need to be read aloud. Most of it is over-whimsical, which may or may not appeal to the very young, but probably won't to their parents. The book does include some striking color photographs, which is all to the good, but the constant intervention by the Pooh characters becomes annoying and distracts from the subject matter. Each chapter is introduced by a faux Pooh story about the content that follows, while between each chapter is a "Look and Find with Piglet" page with eight questions about the accompanying picture, done in a Disneyfied Pooh style that would have made Ernest Shepard wince. Although the information given appears to be accurate, adults will need to decide whether they prefer this over-animated and over-mediated approach to animal books that focus purely on the living creatures themselves. One does hope that parents will allow their children to become acquainted with the fictional characters directly from the work of A. A. Milne and Ernest Shepard. A good index and extensive photo credits are provided. 2003, Disney Press, Ages 2 to 6.

     



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