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Twosomes

Love Poems from the Animal Kingdom

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Do animals celebrate Valentine's Day? Nobody knows for sure. But this funny (and punny) little book imagines how some of them declare their love, affection, or friendship any day of the year."Nice to Meetcha! You smell delish!/Wanna share my water dish?" So asks one tail-thumping dog to another. Whereas a courting dolphin sings, "Come, leap with me and be my wife./You're the porpoise of my life." Ranging from dogs and cats and other pets to some you wouldn't want to pet, such as sharks and porcupines, acclaimed poet Marilyn Singer's captivating couplets and Lee Wildish's expressively humorous illustrations provide a Valentine's Day gift for kids who wouldn't be caught dead being lovey-dovey.

From the Hardcover edition.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      December 13, 2010
      In this greeting card–sized book, animals express their fondness for one another in rhyming couplets. Two bucktoothed horses exchange gazes in side-by-side stables: "Nose to nose, hip to hip,/ ours is a stable relationship." In another, chameleons peer fondly from respective branches ("You and I could be a team,/ if we agree on color scheme"), and a dolphin gushes, "Come leap with me and be my wife./ You're the porpoise of my life." Singer's endearing puns and Wildish's expressively love-struck cartoon animals should tickle young and old valentines alike. Ages 8–12.

    • Kirkus

      December 15, 2010

      This is a gift book, a little Peter Rabbit–sized treat you would give your valentine along with an appropriately diminutive box of sweets. A bijou offering, then, but a well-made one in both its breezy couplets and natty, mildly wacky artwork. The 15 couplets that make up this collection range about, some plainly jokey ("Hugging you takes some practice. / So I'll start out with a cactus," says the porcupine), some touch upon transience ("I'm finding a leaf. You're taking a bite. / Wait a few weeks and our hearts will take flight"). One tackles the urban cool of pigeons: "We'll spend the day wooing, dodging the cars. / We'll spend the night cooing, under the stars." Others play with puns ("You're the porpoise of my life") or brush lightly with love. Wildish's illustrations are chummy and frankly innocent—even the love-zonked squirrel appears to have only been sampling the acorns—and bonbon-sweet without being saccharine. The line work is delicate and exacting, and the colors look as fresh as if they'd just been scraped from the palette. (Picture book/poetry. 6 & up)

       

      (COPYRIGHT (2010) KIRKUS REVIEWS/NIELSEN BUSINESS MEDIA, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.)

    • School Library Journal

      April 1, 2011

      Gr 1-4-Each of the 15 poems in this sweet little book is just two lines long. A typical example is "Porcupines": "Hugging you takes some practice./So I'll start out with a cactus." The color picture shows a wide-eyed creature with his arms around a tall and thorny cactus. The humor is sometimes quiet, sometimes silly, and often stems from puns. The smooth writing is simple (in a good sense) and accessible. The color cartoon illustrations, while not distinctive, are engaging nevertheless. Larger collections may want to add this title for next year's Valentine's Day display.-Lauralyn Persson, Wilmette Public Library, IL

      Copyright 2011 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • The Horn Book

      July 1, 2011
      "Horses: Nose to nose, hip to hip, / ours is a stable relationship." In this petite gift book, couplets describing various animals in love use corny (but funny) puns as unabashedly as the critters declare their devotion; bats hang around together, earthworms dig each other, etc. Clear, cartoony illustrations have an appropriately Valentine-card-esque appearance.

      (Copyright 2011 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

    • Kirkus

      December 15, 2010

      This is a gift book, a little Peter Rabbit-sized treat you would give your valentine along with an appropriately diminutive box of sweets. A bijou offering, then, but a well-made one in both its breezy couplets and natty, mildly wacky artwork. The 15 couplets that make up this collection range about, some plainly jokey ("Hugging you takes some practice. / So I'll start out with a cactus," says the porcupine), some touch upon transience ("I'm finding a leaf. You're taking a bite. / Wait a few weeks and our hearts will take flight"). One tackles the urban cool of pigeons: "We'll spend the day wooing, dodging the cars. / We'll spend the night cooing, under the stars." Others play with puns ("You're the porpoise of my life") or brush lightly with love. Wildish's illustrations are chummy and frankly innocent--even the love-zonked squirrel appears to have only been sampling the acorns--and bonbon-sweet without being saccharine. The line work is delicate and exacting, and the colors look as fresh as if they'd just been scraped from the palette. (Picture book/poetry. 6 & up)

      (COPYRIGHT (2010) KIRKUS REVIEWS/NIELSEN BUSINESS MEDIA, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.)

Formats

  • OverDrive Read
  • EPUB ebook

Languages

  • English

Levels

  • Text Difficulty:0-1

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