Common Sense Note
The words have been chosen for their memorability, the alligators are highly emotive, and it won't take long before read-alouds become harmonies.
Common Sense Review
Reviewed By: Peter Lewis
The words are fun and effective and the illustrations are charming, but they may seem simplistic to today's audience. They're done in black and white with a few colors added, a printing style common in the early '60s.
The expressions, however, are right as rain. In the illustration accompanying "never napping," the young alligator has rings under the eyes and a deep slouch to the shoulders; in the art that goes with "having headaches," the two adult alligators are lying in bed with damp cloths over their eyes.
.Sendak has a way of blending the everyday with the bizarre, extending the possibilities of life. These alligators may be throwing tantrums and acting spoiled and fooling around, but they are also riding reindeer and entertaining elephants. The discontinuities penetrate, and in the process so do the letters.
.Sendak's other primers are One Was Johnny, Pierre, and Chicken Soup With Rice. For an elegant take on the ABCs, see David Pelletier's The Graphic Alphabet.
Plot Summary:
F is for fooling. G is for giggles. In this primer a family of alligators take readers through the ABCs. Maurice Sendak's little book is charming, and even though it's dated, it conveys the warmth and humor little ones desire always.
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