ELLEN STOLL WALSH is the author-illustrator of many acclaimed books for young children, including Mouse Paint, Mouse Count, and Hamsters to the Rescue. She lives near Rochester, New York.
Mouse Shapes
Paperback
(Reprint)
$7.99
- ISBN-13: 9781328740533
- Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
- Publication date: 09/12/2017
- Edition description: Reprint
- Pages: 40
- Sales rank: 24,142
- Product dimensions: 9.00(w) x 5.90(h) x 0.80(d)
- Age Range: 4 - 7 Years
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What can you make with one oval, two circles, and eight triangles? Just ask three clever micewho even find a funny way to trick a sneaky cat.
Ellen Stoll Walsh once again proves that she’s a master of concept books in this celebration of shapes, color, and innovation.
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One cat, one oval, two circles, three rodents, and eight triangles add up to tons of fun in Emily Stoll Walsh's Mouse Shapes. This clever interactive learning tool utilizes a clever story to teach children key concepts about colors, shapes, and problem solving.
School Library Journal
PreSAnother concept book by Walsh that has a simple story line and cut-paper collages. When a cat chases three mice, they hide in a heap of colorful shapes and make an assortment of pictures using them. First they use a square with a triangle on top to create a perfect house; later, they add two circles to a rectangle to make a wagon. They finally combine a bunch of shapes to create "three big scary mice" that frighten the cat away. The collage technique works well for distinguishing the brightly colored shapes, and the simple story is pitched perfectly for sharing with the youngest of listeners.
Shelley B. SutherlandCopyright 2006 Reed Business Information.
Kirkus Reviews
Stoll's signature paper-collaged mice return with another cheerful exposition for preschoolers. This time, a trio-Fred, Violet and Martin-elude the cat by hiding in a pile of bright shapes. Once the threat subsides, the mice manipulate the shapes, chatting it up in a plainspoken play-by-play nicely pitched for young children: "We can make things with them. Here's a square. A triangle on top makes it a perfect house for a little mouse." No sooner do they depict the cat (exercising plenty of artistic license with color and the size of the triangular teeth) than the real beast sends them scurrying again. To turn the tables, they construct "three big scary mice" (clearly crafted to amuse, not frighten preschoolers) dispatching the cat. Stoll's colorful collages appear within white rectangles bordered in black. The crisp layout and well-chosen typography align this volume with Stoll's earlier concept books, Mouse Paint (1989) and Mouse Count (1991). This welcome addition should inspire both kids and grown-ups to create their own shape stories. (Picture book. 2-7)
From the Publisher
"The collage technique works well for distinguishing the brightly colored shapes, and the simple story is pitched perfectly for sharing with the youngest of listeners." -School Library Journal