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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Brigitte Luciani , Eve TharletPublisher: Lerner Publishing Group Imprint: Graphic Universe Volume: 02 Dimensions: Width: 22.10cm , Height: 0.10cm , Length: 27.50cm Weight: 0.340kg ISBN: 9780761356264ISBN 10: 0761356266 Pages: 32 Publication Date: 01 August 2010 Recommended Age: From 5 to 9 years Audience: Children/juvenile , Children / Juvenile Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviews"""In this sequel to The Meeting (Lerner, 2010), in which Mr. Badger and Mrs. Fox met and blended their families, Ginger Fox is having some trouble adjusting to her new life, which includes two badger stepbrothers. In the end she realizes that having a bigger family can only bring more rewards and is happy with her situation. Luciani uses animal characters to bring to life the feelings and frustrations that can develop when children are faced with family changes. The pros and cons that Ginger experiences suggest a realistic view of modern families instead of an idealistic 'Happily ever after.' The watercolor illustrations help set the mood and provide a great deal of depth to each panel. Each strip depicts Ginger's feelings and makes the text come alive. A good choice for the youngest graphic-novel fans."" --School Library Journal --Journal ""It's exactly a year after the mixed woodland cohabitation celebrated in The Meeting (2010), and temperamental Ginger Fox has settled in nicely with her three new badger half-sibs--explaining after an exchange of insults ('Fly doody!' 'Skunk fart!') that arguing with friends is OK, but 'you can argue much better with a brother. It's natural!' Ginger's equanimity is upset, however, first when her roving birth father pays a visit that reminds her how much parental attention she got when she was an only child, and then when two cats from town take over the tree-trunk clubhouse she and the badgers have fixed up. Despite an overt socialization agenda ('I have so many parents!' Ginger exclaims at the end), there are some amusing twists here--'Every fight you avoid is one you win, ' homilizes Ginger's strict and orderly badger dad, just before helping the young folk set up a paint trap to drive off the feline interlopers--and Tharlet's delicately detailed panels never look crowded despite plenty of speech balloons. Above-average fare for younger graphic-fiction fans."" --Kirkus Reviews --Journal" It's exactly a year after the mixed woodland cohabitation celebrated in The Meeting (2010), and temperamental Ginger Fox has settled in nicely with her three new badger half-sibs--explaining after an exchange of insults ('Fly doody!' 'Skunk fart!') that arguing with friends is OK, but 'you can argue much better with a brother. It's natural!' Ginger's equanimity is upset, however, first when her roving birth father pays a visit that reminds her how much parental attention she got when she was an only child, and then when two cats from town take over the tree-trunk clubhouse she and the badgers have fixed up. Despite an overt socialization agenda ('I have so many parents!' Ginger exclaims at the end), there are some amusing twists here--'Every fight you avoid is one you win, ' homilizes Ginger's strict and orderly badger dad, just before helping the young folk set up a paint trap to drive off the feline interlopers--and Tharlet's delicately detailed panels never look crowded despite plenty of speech balloons. Above-average fare for younger graphic-fiction fans. --Kirkus Reviews --Journal In this sequel to The Meeting (Lerner, 2010), in which Mr. Badger and Mrs. Fox met and blended their families, Ginger Fox is having some trouble adjusting to her new life, which includes two badger stepbrothers. In the end she realizes that having a bigger family can only bring more rewards and is happy with her situation. Luciani uses animal characters to bring to life the feelings and frustrations that can develop when children are faced with family changes. The pros and cons that Ginger experiences suggest a realistic view of modern families instead of an idealistic 'Happily ever after.' The watercolor illustrations help set the mood and provide a great deal of depth to each panel. Each strip depicts Ginger's feelings and makes the text come alive. A good choice for the youngest graphic-novel fans. --School Library Journal --Journal Author InformationBrigitte Luciani received a masters degree in literature and worked in journalism, editing, and photo research before moving to France, where she began writing books for kids and adults. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |