The capital letters in Mr. Wright's classroom require immediate medical attention! They are suffering from severe neglect. Mr. Wright's students have completely forgotten about them—and about Teacher Appreciation Day. Luckily an EMS team is on the way for this grammar emergency in the latest addtition to Robin Pulver and Lynn Rowe Reed's langauge arts library. Filled with bold, bright illustrations, this book is a fun and unforgettable introduction to capital letters.
Robin Pulver is a popular picture book author whose website is robinpulver.com. She lives in upstate New York.
Lynn Rowe Reed writes and illustrates picture books and lives in Indiana. You can visit her website at lynnrowereed.com
The capital letters in Mr. Wright's classroom require immediate medical attention! They are suffering from severe neglect. Mr. Wright's students have completely forgotten about them—and about Teacher Appreciation Day. Luckily an EMS team is on the way for this grammar emergency in the latest addtition to Robin Pulver and Lynn Rowe Reed's langauge arts library. Filled with bold, bright illustrations, this book is a fun and unforgettable introduction to capital letters.
Robin Pulver is a popular picture book author whose website is robinpulver.com. She lives in upstate New York.
Lynn Rowe Reed writes and illustrates picture books and lives in Indiana. You can visit her website at lynnrowereed.com
Robin Pulver is a popular picture book author whose website is
robinpulver.com. She lives in upstate New York.
Lynn Rowe Reed writes and illustrates picture books and lives in
Indiana. You can visit her website at lynnrowereed.com
* "In the funniest picture book yet from Pulver and Reed’s Language
Arts Library series, the students are well meaning, easily
distracted, and not without cunning. Childlike acrylic paintings
combine with digital elements to make the artwork vivid and
colorful. From the conversations between uppercase and lowercase
letters to the comedy within class discussions, it’s hard to read
the story aloud without laughing, and the humor makes the lesson
more likely to stick. A madcap grammar book for kids to
enjoy."—Booklist, Starred Review
"Childlike acrylic illustrations, with eyeballs on each letter
(which resemble the magnetic ones kids stick onto refrigerators),
keep the tone light and airy, and an informative author’s note
about why capital letters are also called uppercase letters will
certainly be a surprise to the average elementary school student. A
capital idea!"—The Horn Book
"A fascinating note caps things off by explaining how capital and
small letters got the monikers uppercase and lowercase. Reed’s
acrylic-and-digital artwork sports her now-trademark style,
childlike figures surrounded by doctored plastic fridge magnets. .
. . a pretty painless way to teach capitalization and letter
writing."—Kirkus Reviews
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