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Best Word Book Ever! (Giant Little Golden Book) (School & Library Binding) (Hardcover)
by Richard Scarry
Category:
Children's book, Age 0-3, Learning, Word |
Market price: ¥ 210.00
MSL price:
¥ 158.00
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Stock:
Pre-order item, lead time 3-7 weeks upon payment [ COD term does not apply to pre-order items ] |
MSL rating:
Good for Gifts
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MSL Pointer Review:
A pictorial vocabulary book with words grouped under common activities such as mealtime and basic concepts such as weather. |
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Author: Richard Scarry
Publisher: Golden Books
Pub. in: September, 1999
ISBN: 0307155102
Pages: 72
Measurements: 12 x 10.4 x 0.5 inches
Origin of product: USA
Order code: BC00426
Other information: De Luxe Ed edition ISBN-13: 978-0307155108
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- MSL Picks -
Richard Scarry's Best Word Book Ever! is just that, the best word book ever for young children. Hundreds of words used in everyday langauge are represented in this fun, first dictionary.
Scarry's Busy Town characters introduce chidren to the world of words. Each page is dedicated to a different category of words such as "Tools", "At The Playground", and "At The Supermarket". Also included are the ABC's, number words, and words for parts of the human body.
This book is essential for every child's library. It is Terrific!
Target readers:
Kids aged below 8.
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American artist and writer, world's best-selling children's book author. Scarry wrote or illustrated over 300 books, selling over 300 million copies worldwide. Typical of Scarry's drawings is their emphasis on action and minute detail in depicting everyday activities. The accompanying text is usually limited to a description of the particular action taking place.
Richard Scarry was born in Boston. His father owned a store, and the family lived in comfortable circumstances, even during the Great Depression of the 1930s. Scarry was raised in the atmosphere of love, care and respect, which is reflected in his books. From 1939 to 1942 he studied art at Boston's Museum of Fine Arts School. He served in the army as an art director, editor, and writer of information publications in North Africa and Italy.
After the war Scarry worked in New York as a free-lance illustrator. In 1948 he married Patricia Murphy. His first book, Two Little Miners, was published in the popular Little Golden Book series in 1949. It was followed by five other children's books, published by Simon and Schuster in the same year.
In the 1950s Scarry illustrated and wrote for Little Golden Books. Several of his books were written by Kathryn Jackson and Patsy Scarry. Gradually his animal characters started to behave more like real people, and the drawing became much looser in style. In 1959 he moved with his family from Ridgefield, Connecticut, to Westport.
Scarry made his breakthrough in 1963 with Richard Scarry's Best World Book Ever. The large-format book, with more than 1 400 objects identified with labels, sold seven million copies in twelve years. In 1965 Richard Scarry's Busy, Busy World appeared, a detailed work of drawings and thirty-three stories set in different parts of the world. However, the book did not achieve as much success as Richard Scarry's Storybook Dictionary, which was published the next year. He also illustrated several books written by J.D. Bevington. Other writers included Jane Werner, Mary Reed, Edith Osswald, Peggy Parish, Jean Selligman, Levine Milton, Edward Lear, Ole Risom, Barbara Shook Hazen.
After twenty years with Golden Books, Scarry decided to move to Ramdom House. Its children's book list already included Dr. Seuss, the de Brunhoff Babar books, Stan and Jan Berenstain with their Berenstai Bear books, and Walter Farley, author of the Black Stallion novels.
The Scarry family moved to Lausanne, Switzerland, in 1968. His books, with their animal chraracters in ordinary settings without special ethnic traits, attracted young readers all over the world, and were translated into several languages, including Finnish, Chinese, and Lithuanian. Scarry's characters, Mr. Frumble, Huckle Cat, Mr. Fixit, Lowly Worm, and others, live in Busytown which is populated by friendly and helpful residents. When Absent-Minded Mr. Rabbit gets his feet stuck in cement, all of his friends try to get him out. Although Busytown is more realistic than Lewis Carroll's Wonderland, Scarry's vehicles have occasionally surrealistic elements, including Mr Frumble's pickle car, a car shaped like a doughnut, and a toothbrush mobile. Scarry used repeatedly his formula in which his books did not have a plot but offered bits of information in various spheres of knowledge, on school activities, cars and trucks, counting, animals, professions, etc. "Wherever I go," he was fond of saying, "I'm watching. Even on vacation when I'm in an airport or a railroad station, I look around, snap pictures and find out how people do things. Someday it will all show up in a book." (from The Busy, Busy World of Richard Sacrry by Walter Retan and Ole Risom, 1997)
In 1972 Scarry bought a chalet in Gstaad, where he founded his studio. He also travelled widely with his wife in Africa and the Far East, visiting places depicted in his Busy, Busy World. During the 1980s Scarry's eyesight became worse, but despite the problem he finished in 1985 the drawing for his Biggest World Book Ever.
Richard Scarry died in his home in Gstaad on April 30, 1994. His son Richard has carried on the creative tradition. Scarry considered himself a fun-man disguised as an educator. "Everything has an educational value if you look for it. But it's the fun I want to get across." In the first book he illustrated for Artists and Writers, he painted in full color. By the time he created his first big book, Richard Scarry's Best World Book Ever, he had devised another method. He drew the lines with a pencil, and painted the blueboards in the colors, using a water-based paint. Scarry's favorite was Winsor & Newton Designers Colors. First he painted all the objects that were to be red, then the blue, and so on. It saved time and materials in preparation for printing.
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Kenny and Kathy Bear and their Busytown friends introduce new and familiar names for objects grouped by subject, theme, and setting, in the city and on the farm, at the dentist and at the grocer's, in the kitchen and at the circus and all the places they frequent.
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View all 8 comments |
A reader (MSL quote), USA
<2007-06-26 00:00>
As an adult I'm somewhat embarrassed to say that my favorite book ever, is this book. As a kid, my brother and I use to fight over who would get to view and use this book. I have both the recently published and my original one that my mom bought us back in the 60s. I've viewed the new edition, and even though I haven't compared "page to page" it still gives me a great laugh, humor that Scarry put in that only adults would see, like the Pigs that are cutting the roast beef for "Meal Time." Hey, where's the Ham! A definite must for every eclectic library.
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Stephen Anderson (MSL quote), USA
<2007-06-26 00:00>
This is the best book for pre-readers. Great drawings and characters that little ones love, such as Lowly Worm and Kenny and Kathy Bear. Between my two daughters (now 13 and 8), we have read this book so many times when they were little,that we have worn out three copies. I have bought two other copies to put away for when they have their own little ones. I only wish I would have written Richard Scarry a thanks before he passed away.
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B Mistele (MSL quote), USA
<2007-06-26 00:00>
I think I could highly recommend all of Richard Scarry's books, but this is a one of the classics. This is the book I most identify with Richard Scarry. A large book with loads of things on every page - all with the word underneath. In addition, the cover has numbers to 20 and the letters of the alphabet all with the appropriate corresponding items. This more than anything taught my son not only how to count but what numbers actually mean. I am now buying our second copy; our first is missing it's cover and is torn on many pages. My son is almost 4 years old and has been "reading" this book since he was 9 months old (to himself)! Both he and my husband are big Richard Scarry fans and have converted me. I am buying this book again to begin teaching my son to read.
I highly recommend this book for children from babies to early school age. I don't know a child in my family who doesn't love it!
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Catherine Lynn (MSL quote), USA
<2007-06-26 00:00>
It can now be said that "Richard Scarry's Best Word Book Ever" is multi-generational. Thirty years ago my mother presented this book to my then 18 month old son. As a new mother I was unfamiliar with "popular" children's books, and my child was beginning to receive many gifts of books - but this one was an immediate favorite both with my son and with me. The illustrations are vivid and delightful, quickly capturing the attention of even "short span" toddlers. The emphasis in this large, hard bound volume is to present the child with objects, places, and activities which are familiar even to the nonverbal toddler, allowing the child to begin expanded vocabulary development. What begins with mommy or daddy asking, "..can you find the apple?" quickly leads to the child pointing to the illustration and proudly speaking, "Apple!" This in turn, promotes the childs desire to expand and identify another object, color, or number! No matter that the two year old points to the kitchen stove and says, "hot", the multiple process of critical thinking combined with advancing verbal skills maintains age appropriate advancement. Eventually the child progresses to the concepts of activities and the beginnings of sentence structure. But it doesn't stop there; each illustration is accurately identified with a discriptive word and even several years later you may find your first or second grader using this book as a combination dictionary/spelling aid.
That first volume given to my child was always at the top of the "stacks" (i.e. no matter how messey the bedroom, the "Best Word Book Ever" could easily be located.) From his growing hands it was passed to four successive siblings. Taped up and dog-eared, but never abused, this wonderful book gave each of my children an edge-up on vocabulary development. No wonder then that when my first grandchild began to show signs of frustration when he did not yet have the "name" for what he wanted that grandma quickly got on-line to order "Richard Scarry's Best Word Book Ever." We have had this treasure for slightly over a week and every day Andrew eagerly searches for a comfortable lap to help him explore what is already his "favorite" book. He adds to his speaking skills at least one and often two or three words daily!
The only (criticism is to strong a word) "suggestion" I would offer to the publishers is some possible updating; my grandson cannot relate to televisions with "rabbit ears", telephones now are both cordless and mobile, and the addition of an illustrated computer would be appropriate and welcome. Thankfully, the best of everyday life remains basically unchanged: homes and families still have the same common features from bedrooms to kitchens, and brushing teeth to pots and pans; a firetruck is red, a monkey lives at the zoo, elephants are also at the circus, and teachers "live" in colorful classrooms. The "Magic" is still there!
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