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    Some Good News (Cobble Street Cousins Series #4)

    4.6 3

    by Cynthia Rylant, Wendy Anderson Halperin (Illustrator)


    Paperback

    $5.99
    $5.99

    Temporarily Out of Stock Online

    Customer Reviews

    Cynthia Rylant is the author of more than 100 books for young people, including the beloved Henry and Mudge, Annie and Snowball, Brownie & Pearl, and Mr. Putter & Tabby series. Her novel Missing May received the Newbery Medal. She lives in Lake Oswego, Oregon. Visit her at CynthiaRylant.com.

    Wendy Anderson Halperin is an acclaimed artist who has illustrated dozens of books for children, including Let’s Go Home by Cynthia Rylant, Soft House by Jane Yolen, and Turn, Turn, Turn! by Peter Seeger. She lives in South Haven, Michigan.

    Table of Contents

    A Great Idea

    Soup and Company

    News! News!

    Yardley

    A Small World

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    .

    Meet the
    Cobble Street Cousins

    Lily, who wants to be a poet

    Tess, who wants to be a Broadway star

    Rosie, who wants a little cottage with flowers by the door

    It's spring on Cobble Street, and Lily has a great idea — the Cobble Street Cousins' own newspaper! Soon the very first edition of The Cobble Street Courier is hot off the presses, with a poem by Lily, Tess's favorite jokes, and Rosie's yummy recipe for shortbread — even an interview with Aunt Lucy's boyfriend, Michael. Now it's time to deliver the paper to all the cousins' old friends on Cobble Street — and a couple of new ones!

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    From the Publisher
    The Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books The charming stories are going to make second- and third-grade girls blissfully happy.
    School Library Journal
    Gr 2-4Two more beginning chapter-book series titles that young girls will adore. Three nine-year-old cousinsTess, Lily, and Rosielive with their Aunt Lucy while their parents tour with a ballet company. In Some Good News, the girls create a local newspaper; in Special Gifts, they learn to sew. The simple plots rise and fall gently with enough action and activity to interest beginning readers. These are lighthearted stories with happy endings. The minutely detailed pencil-and-watercolor artwork sprinkled throughout the books reveals the unique personalities of the girls and creates a wonderfully serene setting. Readers are going to wish they, too, lived on Cobble Street. Good alternatives to The American Girls series (Pleasant Company).Sarah ONeal, Salt Lake County Library System, UT Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.
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