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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: J.otto SeiboldPublisher: McSweeney's Publishing Imprint: McSweeney's Publishing Dimensions: Width: 20.00cm , Height: 1.00cm , Length: 25.50cm Weight: 0.269kg ISBN: 9781938073359ISBN 10: 1938073355 Pages: 32 Publication Date: 27 June 2013 Recommended Age: From 4 years Audience: Children/juvenile , Preschool (0-5) Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Temporarily unavailable The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you. Table of ContentsReviewsInventive and contemporary -- The New York Times A free shopping spree turns into a race against time--never a happy idea when you're a sloth.Too logy even to get to the phone before the answering machine kicks in, Sloth learns that he has only eight hours to claim his spree at the store. Can he make it? Being narcoleptic as well as slow-moving, his ensuing odyssey quickly turns hilariously suspenseful as Seibold urges readers to form a cheering section with lines printed in a different color--'Yay, Sloth! Let's go, Sloth!' In the characteristically stylized illustrations, Sloth's frozen, masklike features add a Buster Keaton-ish air to his frantic efforts. Having dragged his way down the street and into the park, where a hoped-for shortcut becomes a long detour/nap, Sloth arrives in the nick of time on a stolen hang glider. His spree turns out to be short but sweet, as he immediately rams his cart into a pile of pillows and passes out. The author cranks tongue further into cheek with witty side business, like a glimpse of an Occupy! camp in the park and, at the end, a one-person pillow fight ('Yay, Sloth! You won!').Another clever, quirky outing. -- Kirkus Seibold's distinctive stylized illustrations and oddball main character should win over even the sleepiest readers. -- San Francisco Chronicle The book is a delight, graced by Seibold's brightly colored and whimsical style... -John McMurtrie, San Francisco Chronicle J. Otto Seibold cleverly posits the sloth's sluggishness alongside American consumerism, rendering it the kind of book parents will actually enjoy unpacking with their children night after night. -- SF Weekly Three hours may sound like plenty of time to you and me, but to a sloth, three hours is, like, a nanosecond. Oh, noes! How on earth is a creature that movies 5.1 to 15 feet per minute supposed to make it all the way across town to the Shopping Spree Store? And what will Sloth buy when Inventive and contemporary -- The New York Times <br><br> A free shopping spree turns into a race against time--never a happy idea when you're a sloth.<br>Too logy even to get to the phone before the answering machine kicks in, Sloth learns that he has only eight hours to claim his spree at the store. Can he make it? Being narcoleptic as well as slow-moving, his ensuing odyssey quickly turns hilariously suspenseful as Seibold urges readers to form a cheering section with lines printed in a different color--'Yay, Sloth! Let's go, Sloth!' In the characteristically stylized illustrations, Sloth's frozen, masklike features add a Buster Keaton-ish air to his frantic efforts. Having dragged his way down the street and into the park, where a hoped-for shortcut becomes a long detour/nap, Sloth arrives in the nick of time on a stolen hang glider. His spree turns out to be short but sweet, as he immediately rams his cart into a pile of pillows and passes out. The author cranks tongue further into cheek with witty side business, like a glimpse of an Occupy! camp in the park and, at the end, a one-person pillow fight ('Yay, Sloth! You won!').<br>Another clever, quirky outing. -- Kirkus <br><br> Seibold's distinctive stylized illustrations and oddball main character should win over even the sleepiest readers. -- San Francisco Chronicle <br> <br> A free shopping spree turns into a race against time--never a happy idea when you're a sloth.<br><br>Too logy even to get to the phone before the answering machine kicks in, Sloth learns that he has only eight hours to claim his spree at the store. Can he make it? Being narcoleptic as well as slow-moving, his ensuing odyssey quickly turns hilariously suspenseful as Seibold urges readers to form a cheering section with lines printed in a different color--'Yay, Sloth! Let's go, Sloth!' In the characteristically stylized illustrations, Sloth's frozen, masklike features add a Buster Keaton-ish air to his frantic efforts. Having dragged his way down the street and into the park, where a hoped-for shortcut becomes a long detour/nap, Sloth arrives in the nick of time on a stolen hang glider. His spree turns out to be short but sweet, as he immediately rams his cart into a pile of pillows and passes out. The author cranks tongue further into cheek with witty side business, like a glimpse of an Occupy! camp in the park and, at the end, a one-person pillow fight ('Yay, Sloth! You won!').<br><br>Another clever, quirky outing. --- Kirkus Reviews <br> Author InformationJ. Otto Seibold is a self-taught artist from Oakland, California, best known as the author and illustrator of many renowned children's books, among them Olive, the Other Reindeer (with Vivian Walsh). His work has been exhibited and published widely. Lost Sloth marks his twentieth anniversary in children's books. 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