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Good Night, Gorilla (Paperback)
by Peggy Rathmann
Category:
Bedtime & Dreaming, Ages 0-3, Children's book |
Market price: ¥ 108.00
MSL price:
¥ 98.00
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Stock:
In Stock |
MSL rating:
Good for Gifts
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MSL Pointer Review:
A delightful romp, a surefire hit, and a good bedtime book! |
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Author: Peggy Rathmann
Publisher: Putnam Juvenile
Pub. in: February, 1996
ISBN: 0399230033
Pages: 17
Measurements: 5.0 x 6.6 x 0.8 inches
Origin of product: USA
Order code: BC00026
Other information:
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- MSL Picks -
Universally understandable subject matter and a narrative conveyed almost entirely through pictures mark this as an ideal title for beginners. A zookeeper makes his nightly rounds, bidding good night to a gorilla, a lion, a giraffe and so on. He doesn't know that the gorilla has procured his keys and is unlocking each animal's cage; a jungle crowd files quietly behind the keeper as he walks home and crawls into bed. When his wife says, "Good night, dear," seven voices reply, "Good night," and it's up to the missus to return the mischievous menagerie. Although Rathmann's illustrations lack the artistic ingenuity she displayed in Ruby the Copycat and Bootsie Barker Bites, the author/artist connects with her audience on several levels. Children can identify with the animals, who have toys in their cages (the elephant has a plush Babar) and resist being left alone in their "rooms" all night; they will also enjoy some minor subplots. Some details prove questionable (for example, one overdrawn visage of Mrs. Zookeeper seems blurry, particularly because she's rendered with a few simple lines elsewhere), yet these considerations take a back seat to Rathmann's comic exuberance.
Target readers:
Kids aged 0-6
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Caldecott-medalist Peggy Rathmann was born in St. Paul, Minnesota, and grew up in the suburbs with two brothers and two sisters.
"In the summer we lolled in plastic wading pools guzzling Kool-Aid. In the winter we sculpted giant snow animals. It was a good life."
Ms. Rathmann graduated from Mounds View High School in New Brighton, Minnesota, then attended colleges everywhere, changing her major repeatedly. She eventually earned a B.A. in psychology from the University of Minnesota.
"I wanted to teach sign language to gorillas, but after taking a class in signing, I realized what I'd rather do was draw pictures of gorillas".
Ms. Rathmann studied commercial art at the American Academy in Chicago, fine art at the Atelier Lack in Minneapolis, and children's-book writing and illustration at the Otis Parsons School of Design in Los Angeles.
"I spent the first three weeks of my writing class at Otis Parsons filching characters from my classmates' stories. Finally, the teacher convinced me that even a beginning writer can create an original character if the character is driven by the writer's most secret weirdness. Eureka! A little girl with a passion for plagiarism! I didn't want anyone to know it was me, so I made the character look like my sister."
The resulting book, Ruby the Copycat, earned Ms. Rathmann the "Most Promising New Author" distinction in Publishers Weekly's 1991 annual Cuffie Awards. In 1992 she illustrated Bootsie Barker Bites for Barbara Bottner, her teacher at Otis Parsons.
A homework assignment produced an almost wordless story, Good Night, Gorilla, inspired by a childhood memory.
"When I was little, the highlight of the summer was running barefoot through the grass, in the dark, screaming. We played kick-the-can, and three-times-around-the-house, and sometimes we just stood staring into other people's picture windows, wondering what it would be like to go home to someone else's house."
That story, however, was only nineteen pages long, and everyone agreed that the ending was a dud. Two years and ten endings later, Good Night, Gorilla was published and recognized as an ALA Notable Children's Book for 1994.
The recipient of the 1996 Caldecott Medal, Officer Buckle and Gloria, is the story of a school safety officer upstaged by his canine partner.
"We have a videotape of my mother chatting in the dining room while, unnoticed by her or the cameraman, the dog is licking every poached egg on the buffet. The next scene shows the whole family at the breakfast table, complimenting my mother on the delicious poached eggs. The dog, of course, is pretending not to know what a poached egg is. The first time we watched that tape we were so shocked, we couldn't stop laughing. I suspect that videotape had a big influence on my choice of subject matter."
Ms. Rathmann lives and works in San Francisco, in an apartment she shares with her husband, John Wick, and a very funny bunch of ants.
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"Good night, Gorilla," says the weary watchman as he walks by the gorilla cage on his nightly rounds at the zoo. The gorilla answers by quietly pick-pocketing the guard's keys, stealthily trailing him, and unlocking the cages of every animal the oblivious fellow bids goodnight to. Looking much like an exhausted father, the uniformed guard traipses home toward his cottage, while the lonely zoo animals softly parade behind him. The animals manage to slip into his bedroom and nestle unnoticed near his sleepy wife-until the bold little gorilla goes so far as to snuggle up beside her as she turns out the light. Author and illustrator Peggy Rathmann (creator of the Caldecott-winning Officer Buckle and Gloria) relies more on the nuances of her jewel-toned pictures than on words to pace this giggly bedtime story, making it perfect for observant preschoolers. In one inky-black spread, Rathmann lets only the shocked, wide-open eyes of the guard's wife tell us that the gorilla has been detected! Tiny details such as the faithful, banana-toting mouse and sky-bound pink balloon that appear in each picture keep this book fresh, magical, and fun-even after countless bedtime readings.
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View all 5 comments |
M. Allen Greenbaum (MSL quote), USA
<2006-12-25 00:00>
This book was read at a mixed-age party and I'm sure that the adults laughed as much as the children! It has quickly become a classic, featuring the cleverly pictured sneaky antics of a renegade gorilla.
Our young hero steals the keys from a zookeeper and frees all the animals, which follow the keeper home at night. Hilarious "lights out" confusion ensues with a comical surprise ending!
34 pages, with only ten different words, the expressive, colorful pictures say it all. This playful book is appropriate for infants, toddlers, and the beginning reader as well. A delightful romp and a surefire hit! One of those few treasured books that you'll keep for years is to come.
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Jim Carson (MSL quote), USA
<2006-12-25 00:00>
The story's in the pictures: a mischievous gorilla borrows the zoo keeper's keys and as the zookeeper is completing his rounds, the gorilla lets the animals out. The gorilla, with all of the animals following him, ends up in the zookeeper's bedroom.
The pictures are terrific, with a lot going on in the background. There's a little mouse toting the gorilla's banana, each animal's cage has a toy, and, of course, the zookeeper's wife's surprise and familiarity with the animals following him home.
My daughter's definitely picked up some rather complex animal names (e.g., giraffe, armadillo) and picked up on the gorilla's shenanigans pretty quickly.
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A reader (MSL quote), TX United States
<2006-12-25 00:00>
What an awesome, simple story for young children. My sons love the black page with just the zookeeper's wife's eyes. If I start this book with one son, the other comes running over as soon as I say, "Goodnight, Gorilla". They can't get enough of it. This one never gets rotated out of our book bin.
They have learned so much vocabulary from this story even though it is far from being word intensive. They point out the keys, moon, balloon, banana, zookeeper's shirt and the flashlight on all of the pages. Just today, one of my sons pointed out his own shirt after I labeled the zookeeper's.
Use this book with older siblings too! I am a teacher too and would use this for children who have trouble writing. So many times students won't write because they don't have a story in mind. Show them the book. The story structure is there, just have the students add the text. I have done it with other books and the technique works wonders.
Hooray, Peggy Rathmann! Keep the good books.
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Tim Janson (MSL quote), USA
<2006-12-25 00:00>
Well...I guess you can debate over whether you want to read a book to your little ones where the main character essentially sneaks out of bed and plays mischievously about, but please take your chances with this delightfully funny and charming book.
The Night watchman at the zoo has just told the gorilla goodnight and turns his back only to have the gorilla pick the keys to his cage from his pocket. Sneaking around, the Gorilla uses the keys to open up the cages of other animals. They form a parade behind the unwitting watchman, even following him home and into bed for the night until the watchman's wife notices and leads the animals back to their rightful beds for the night.
Kids will laugh as the gorilla and other animals sneak around right behind the watchman's back. Peggy Rathman's funny, cartoon-like illustrations are the perfect complement to her text. This one has quickly become a new favorite in our household with my two year old.
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View all 5 comments |
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