Fortunately, Unfortunately

Author:   Michael Foreman
Publisher:   Andersen Press
ISBN:  

9780761374602


Pages:   32
Publication Date:   01 January 2011
Recommended Age:   From 4 to 7 years
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
Limited stock is available. It will be ordered for you and shipped pending supplier's limited stock.

Our Price $44.75 Quantity:  
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Fortunately, Unfortunately


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Overview

Mom sends Milo on an errand to return Granny's umbrella to her. Fortunately, Milo doesn't realize that he's about to encounter several unfortunate setbacks with pirates, dinosaurs, and aliens. But it all turns into one amazing, fortunate adventure.

Full Product Details

Author:   Michael Foreman
Publisher:   Andersen Press
Imprint:   Andersen Press
Dimensions:   Width: 24.80cm , Height: 1.00cm , Length: 28.60cm
Weight:   0.440kg
ISBN:  

9780761374602


ISBN 10:   0761374604
Pages:   32
Publication Date:   01 January 2011
Recommended Age:   From 4 to 7 years
Audience:   Children/juvenile ,  Children / Juvenile
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Out of Stock Indefinitely
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
Limited stock is available. It will be ordered for you and shipped pending supplier's limited stock.

Table of Contents

Reviews

Young monkey Milo is called upon to return his grandmother's umbrella. Unfortunately, he meets one roadblock after another (pirates, space aliens, dinosaurs, etc.), delaying his journey. Fortunately, these encounters are extremely entertaining. Vibrant watercolor illustrations reflect Milo's wild adventure from home to Granny's. The fortunately/unfortunately patterned text makes this a great read-aloud. --The Horn Book Guide --Journal If life could be summed up in a picture book, Fortunately, Unfortunately could easily be selected as life's spokesperson. In this unpredictable adventure story, Milo the monkey is told by his mother to bring granny her umbrella. With this simple task come difficult and sometimes dangerous risks. As Milo goes to granny's house, fortunate and unfortunate events happen along the way. Milo meets rain. It is fortunate that he has an umbrella, but it is unfortunate that he doesn't look where he is going. Here starts life's erratic journey. Readers will enjoy the humor and find hope in the worst situation. Teachers could use this book to show sequence and repetition. The colorful watercolor illustrations correlate well with the simple text. This book is perfect for a young children's storytime. Recommended. --Library Media Connection --Journal An innocuous errand--delivering an umbrella to his grandmother--turns into a riotous adventure for Milo, a monkey pictured wearing shorts, a T-shirt, and sneakers. Vibrant watercolors by two-time Kate Greenaway Medal-winner Foreman playfully portray Milo's outlandish reversals of fortune, beginning with a raincloud darkening a sunny sky: 'Fortunately, he had Granny's umbrella... Unfortunately, he didn't look where he was going.' Milo steps off a cliff and falls into the mouth of a whale, which precipitates a chain of events that brings him face-to-face with unfriendly pirates, wild dinosaurs, and two species of aliens. The rainbow-colored umbrella repeatedly comes to his rescue, serving as a parachute, boat, and sword. It appears life will return to normal when Milo finally arrives at Granny's house, but what spills out of the umbrella suggests otherwise. The repeated use of the two title words--perhaps an homage to Remy Charlip's 1964 picture book Fortunately, which used the same two words the same way--creates a seesaw effect that encourages chiming in, and the jaunty art adds laughs. --Publishers Weekly --Journal Answering the longstanding need for an alternative to Remy Charlip's classic but now-creaky Fortunately (1964), Foreman reworks the titular dichotomy into a young chimp's adventuresome delivery of an umbrella to his grandma's house. 'Fortunately, it was a lovely day and Milo liked going to Granny's house because she always had cake... / Unfortunately, a dark cloud appeared and it soon began to rain... / Fortunately, he had Granny's umbrella... That umbrella shows great utility not only in the sudden rainstorm, but when there's a pirate captain and a set of giant hostile aliens to poke on the way past an erupting volcano, dinosaurs and other hazards-all depicted with luminous watercolors in big, comical scenes. There's so much action that monotony is never really a danger, which renders occasional breaks in the titular pattern unnecessary (' Please don't pop us! Please don't pop us! squeaked the huge aliens'). Still, it's a fresh and welcome alternative to a perennial crowd pleaser that has become a period piece. --Kirkus Reviews --Journal A boylike monkey (or monkeylike boy?) is given a task by his mother. 'Granny has left her umbrella here. Can you take it to her house, please?' So begins Milo's great adventure filled with setbacks and serendipity. The journey begins innocently enough. 'Fortunately, it was a lovely day... Unfortunately a dark cloud appeared....Fortunately, he had Granny's umbrella....' But soon Milo finds himself fighting off unfriendly pirates inside the belly of a whale, standing face-to-face with wild dinosaurs inside a volcano, and being captured by aliens. At last he arrives at Grandma's house with her umbrella looking a little the worse for wear, but filled with pirate treasure. Unfortunately, the pirates have tracked Milo down, and readers are left to imagine what further adventures might ensue. Foreman's narrative carries the 'fortunately, unfortunately' trope throughout. With only one or two sentences per page, listeners will easily follow the unfolding story line. Such a convoluted chain of events could easily be weighed down by visually cluttered illustrations, but Foreman employs a light touch with his bright watercolors, and the eye follows exactly where it needs to go. Regrettably, Milo himself is rendered in a slightly different style on every page, and the effect is mildly off-putting. Still, those adventure-minded youngsters who pine for a life with more pirates, dinosaurs, and aliens will appreciate this work, though teachers introducing the 'fortunately, unfortunately' style in writing assignments may wish to stick with Remy Charlip's classic, Fortunately (Scholastic, 1964). Purchase as a supplement to larger collections. --School Library Journal --Journal


Young monkey Milo is called upon to return his grandmother's umbrella. Unfortunately, he meets one roadblock after another (pirates, space aliens, dinosaurs, etc.), delaying his journey. Fortunately, these encounters are extremely entertaining. Vibrant watercolor illustrations reflect Milo's wild adventure from home to Granny's. The fortunately/unfortunately patterned text makes this a great read-aloud. --The Horn Book Guide --Journal A boylike monkey (or monkeylike boy?) is given a task by his mother. 'Granny has left her umbrella here. Can you take it to her house, please?' So begins Milo's great adventure filled with setbacks and serendipity. The journey begins innocently enough. 'Fortunately, it was a lovely day... Unfortunately a dark cloud appeared....Fortunately, he had Granny's umbrella....' But soon Milo finds himself fighting off unfriendly pirates inside the belly of a whale, standing face-to-face with wild dinosaurs inside a volcano, and being captured by aliens. At last he arrives at Grandma's house with her umbrella looking a little the worse for wear, but filled with pirate treasure. Unfortunately, the pirates have tracked Milo down, and readers are left to imagine what further adventures might ensue. Foreman's narrative carries the 'fortunately, unfortunately' trope throughout. With only one or two sentences per page, listeners will easily follow the unfolding story line. Such a convoluted chain of events could easily be weighed down by visually cluttered illustrations, but Foreman employs a light touch with his bright watercolors, and the eye follows exactly where it needs to go. Regrettably, Milo himself is rendered in a slightly different style on every page, and the effect is mildly off-putting. Still, those adventure-minded youngsters who pine for a life with more pirates, dinosaurs, and aliens will appreciate this work, though teachers introducing the 'fortunately, unfortunately' style in writing assignments may wish to stick with Remy Charlip's classic, Fortunately (Scholastic, 1964). Purchase as a supplement to larger collections. --School Library Journal --Journal An innocuous errand--delivering an umbrella to his grandmother--turns into a riotous adventure for Milo, a monkey pictured wearing shorts, a T-shirt, and sneakers. Vibrant watercolors by two-time Kate Greenaway Medal-winner Foreman playfully portray Milo's outlandish reversals of fortune, beginning with a raincloud darkening a sunny sky: 'Fortunately, he had Granny's umbrella... Unfortunately, he didn't look where he was going.' Milo steps off a cliff and falls into the mouth of a whale, which precipitates a chain of events that brings him face-to-face with unfriendly pirates, wild dinosaurs, and two species of aliens. The rainbow-colored umbrella repeatedly comes to his rescue, serving as a parachute, boat, and sword. It appears life will return to normal when Milo finally arrives at Granny's house, but what spills out of the umbrella suggests otherwise. The repeated use of the two title words--perhaps an homage to Remy Charlip's 1964 picture book Fortunately, which used the same two words the same way--creates a seesaw effect that encourages chiming in, and the jaunty art adds laughs. --Publishers Weekly --Journal Answering the longstanding need for an alternative to Remy Charlip's classic but now-creaky Fortunately (1964), Foreman reworks the titular dichotomy into a young chimp's adventuresome delivery of an umbrella to his grandma's house. 'Fortunately, it was a lovely day and Milo liked going to Granny's house because she always had cake... / Unfortunately, a dark cloud appeared and it soon began to rain... / Fortunately, he had Granny's umbrella... That umbrella shows great utility not only in the sudden rainstorm, but when there's a pirate captain and a set of giant hostile aliens to poke on the way past an erupting volcano, dinosaurs and other hazards-all depicted with luminous watercolors in big, comical scenes. There's so much action that monotony is never really a danger, which renders occasional breaks in the titular pattern unnecessary (' Please don't pop us! Please don't pop us! squeaked the huge aliens'). Still, it's a fresh and welcome alternative to a perennial crowd pleaser that has become a period piece. --Kirkus Reviews --Journal If life could be summed up in a picture book, Fortunately, Unfortunately could easily be selected as life's spokesperson. In this unpredictable adventure story, Milo the monkey is told by his mother to bring granny her umbrella. With this simple task come difficult and sometimes dangerous risks. As Milo goes to granny's house, fortunate and unfortunate events happen along the way. Milo meets rain. It is fortunate that he has an umbrella, but it is unfortunate that he doesn't look where he is going. Here starts life's erratic journey. Readers will enjoy the humor and find hope in the worst situation. Teachers could use this book to show sequence and repetition. The colorful watercolor illustrations correlate well with the simple text. This book is perfect for a young children's storytime. Recommended. --Library Media Connection --Journal


Author Information

Michael Foreman is an award-winning author. He has won the Kate Greenaway Medal twice and has been the UK nominee for the Hans Christian Andersen Award twice. His books are published all over the world. He lives in the UK. Michael Foreman is an award-winning author. He has won the Kate Greenaway Medal twice and has been the UK nominee for the Hans Christian Andersen Award twice. His books are published all over the world. He lives in the UK.

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