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Today With Meg and Ted

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Toddlers Meg and Ted discover so much in a day! "Today is a good day to stand on one foot . . . Today is a good day to look at a foot. Today is a good day to eat our favorite food . . . and today is a good day to try something new." In the course of a day, young children encounter a wide range of experiences and emotions. This book captures the sense of wonder felt by all children as they explore the world with their zenlike focus. The book's simple text and old-fashioned art style evoke the gentle look and feel of antique children's books, but with a fresh twist that is very much
of . . . today.
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  • Reviews

    • Publisher's Weekly

      November 22, 2010
      Cherubic sibs Meg and Ted show readers how a single, relatively unremarkable day can prove itself more than worthy of the encomium "it's all good." "Today is a good day to be very still," writes debuting author Gee, showing her two characters in extreme closeup, admiring a butterfly perched on a flower. Flip the page, and the duo is seen chasing the butterfly on foot and tricycle, demonstrating that today is also "a good day to be very, very quick!" Even potential downers are put into perspective: when Ted gets put in a time-out chair, Gee notes (in one of the book's few attempts at humor), "Today is a good day for some quiet time, alone." The sunny palette, combined with an almost clear line style of illustration, gives the pages an appropriately chipper energy; the repetitive vocabulary and sturdy, easy-reader typeface may encourage audiences to try their hand at reading aloud. But all that isn't quite enough to dispel an aura of stodginess from the pages. Meg and Ted's unplugged fun, while laudable, feels like it's unfolding in a distant era. Ages 2–5.

    • Booklist

      February 1, 2011
      Preschool-K With a simple sensibility and art that harkens back to an earlier era, this look at a brother and sisters day will remind those who can remember back that far of the Dick and Jane books. Here, the siblings are Meg and Ted, preschoolers. Always at the forefront is the idea Today is a good day. A good day to be still as they watch a butterfly and to be quick enough to chase it when it flies away. Ted falls off his tricycle, and its a good day to ask for help and for Meg to give it. Sometimes the text is the tiniest bit confusing. On a good day to be ourselves, the kids are in costume, clearly pretending to be someone else. But mostly this does a fine job of sorting out the siblings busy activities. Despite the feel of an earlier era, theres nothing overt in the pastel-colored art that would make a child think this isnt contemporary. A big plusthe simple words and sentences make this an excellent choice for beginning readers.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2011, American Library Association.)

    • The Horn Book

      July 1, 2011
      Meg and Ted play, explore, do their favorite activities, and try new things. Most sentences in the simple, repetitive text begin: "Today is a good day" (the one exception being midday meal: "It is always a good day for lunch!"). The whole adorable package, including throwback Dick-and-Jane-style illustrations, is right on the borderline of too precious.

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

Formats

  • OverDrive Read
  • EPUB ebook

Languages

  • English

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