Tickle Monster Edouard Manceau

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Kym Wash

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Aug 5, 2024, 12:08:45 AM8/5/24
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Thisengaging picture book prompts young children to face their monster fear and take charge of the situation! The reader is prompted to tickle various parts of the monster, deconstructing the creature and repurposing his parts into a far less threatening scene. His horns become the moon, his legs and arms become trees, his nose becomes a car...slowly but surely, the monster's shapes build a peaceful nighttime landscape. Manceau's bold, geometric illustrations create a deceptively simple visual narrative that encourages readers to see the parts as well as the whole.Reminiscent of Ed Emberley's Go Away, Big Green Monster!, this text empowers the child to be brave and clever in the face of adversity. Publisher: ABRAMS OverDrive Read ISBN: 9781613128664 Release date: August 11, 2015

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This engaging picture book prompts young children to face their monster fear and take charge of the situation! The reader is prompted to tickle various parts of the monster, deconstructing the creature and repurposing his parts into a far less threatening scene. His horns become the moon, his legs and arms become trees, his nose becomes a car...slowly but surely, the monster's shapes build a peaceful nighttime landscape. Manceau's bold, geometric illustrations create a deceptively simple visual narrative that encourages readers to see the parts as well as the whole.Reminiscent of Ed Emberley's Go Away, Big Green Monster!, this text empowers the child to be brave and clever in the face of adversity. Juvenile Fiction Picture Book Fiction Details Publisher:

ABRAMS




This engaging picture book prompts young children to face their fear of monsters and take charge of the situation! The reader is prompted to tickle various parts of a monster, deconstructing the creature and repurposing his parts into a far less threatening scene. His horns become the moon, his legs and arms become trees, his nose becomes a car. . . . Slowly but surely, the monster's shapes build a peaceful nighttime landscape. Manceau's bold, geometric illustrations create a deceptively simple visual narrative that encourages readers to see the parts as well as the whole.



Reminiscent of Ed Emberley's Go Away, Big Green Monster!, this book empowers the child to be brave and clever in the face of adversity.


\u00c9douard Manceau is a renowned children's book author and illustrator in his native France. In the United States, he is the author and illustrator of Hatch, Little Egg and My Little Library. He lives in Toulouse, France.

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