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We're Going on a
Bear Hunt

Written By: Michael Rosen
List Price: $7.99
Availability: Usually ships within
1 - 2 business days
Product Details
Publisher: Simon & Schuster Children's
Date Published: September 1997
Format: board book
Pages: 36 pages
Reviews:
FROM THE PUBLISHER
We're going on a bear hunt. We're going to catch a big one. What a beautiful
day! We're not scared.
Ready for some fun? Come along!
Publisher's Weekly
A father and his four children--a toddler, a preschool boy and two older
girls--go on the traditional bear hunt based on the old camp chant: ``We're
going to catch a big one. / What a beautiful day! / We're not scared. / Oh-oh!
Grass! / Long, wavy grass. / We can't go over it. / We can't go under it. / Oh,
no! / We've got to go through it!'' The family skids down a grassy slope,
swishes across a river, sludges through mud and, of course, finally sees the
bear, who chases them all back to their home. It's a fantastic journey--was it
real or imagined?--with the family's actions (and interaction) adding to the
trip a goodnatured, jolly mood. The design of the oversized volume alternates
black-and-white drawings with gorgeous full-color watercolor paintings, which
Oxenbury uses to wonderful effect. Readers accustomed to her board books will
find a different style here, of puddled colors and sweeps of light and shadow.
The scale of the pictures and the ease with which the text can be shouted aloud
make this ideal for families or groups to share. Ages 4-9. (Sept.)
Children's Literature - Marilyn Courtot
This delightful picture book makes a new appearance as a board book, and it is
wonderful. The same mix of black and white illustrations accompanied by a
rhythmic text, which alternate with full-color spreads full of onomatopoeia, are
still there as the family ventures through fields across streams and through icy
landscapes until they meet up with a bear in its cave. It's a fantasy adventure
that ends with the whole family snuggled under the comforter in the parents' big
bed, and now the board book crowd will get to enjoy the fun.
School Library Journal
PreS-K-- From England comes this refreshing interpretation of an old camp
hand-rhyme presented in large picture-book format. The setting is the beach and
its environs. The cast: five hunters (a man and four children) and a dog, all of
whom stalk the furry beast through coastal landscapes, oozy mud, an unlikely
snowstorm, and finally, into the cave where they meet the object of their
search. And, just as in the old tale, they reverse their steps and, in this
version, end up in bed under the covers, vowing never to go on a bear hunt
again. The beautiful pastel watercolor paintings that fill the huge pages
alternate with soft-textured charcoal sketches. The most impressive of the
black, white, and gray drawings is the full-spread storm as it approaches. The
final ``reverse'' scenes are small blocks, three to a page in rapid succession,
in sync with the rushed pace of the text. Even the endpapers lend themselves to
the mood of the tale. In contrast to the sunny beach featured at the front, a
lonely bear walks the beach in the moonlight at the back of the book. The
characters' faces are round and filled with expression. The rhyme is printed in
a large, almost calligraphic typeface that leaps off the page, alive in
onomatopoeic expression (``squelch squerch!'' and ``Hoooo woooo!'') and
reassurance for young listeners (``We're not scared''). This version adds
vitality to Sivulich's more traditional I'm Going on a Bear Hunt (Dutton, 1973;
o.p.). Readers and listeners will delight in this imaginative pursuit over and
over again. --Marianne Pilla, Upper Dublin Pub . Lib . , Dresher, PA