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Loading... How I Became a Pirate (edition 2003)by Melinda Long (Author), David Shannon (Illustrator)
Work InformationHow I Became a Pirate by Melinda Long
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. Really fun illustrations with tongue-in-cheek humor. Jeremey Jacob joins a crew of pirates and learns what a normal day is like with them. Eventually, they bury the treasure they have and return Jeremey to shore. This book uses a lot of imagination and the call-and-response would be fun to do during a reader's theatre. However, I wish there would have been one or two facts about pirates in the book.
Jeremy Jacob is invited by Captain Braid Beard and his crew to join their voyage to bury a treasure. Jeremy is ecstatic about joining the crew, and thinks the pirate life will be fun. On board he learns the songs, language, and manners of the pirates. Initially, he is having a great time. But soon Jeremy discovers all the things that pirates don’t do; including not reading bedtime stories at night, not tucking into bed, and not giving good night kisses. He realizes that the pirate life isn’t all it seems to be, and begins to rethink his decision to become a pirate. Landlubbers, take heart! Here's a tale of a lad who sets sail and finds he prefers the comforts of home. Equipped with pail and shovel, young Jeremy Jacob is happily constructing a sandcastle and moat when his day at the beach takes an unexpected turn. A ship sails in with a Jolly Roger raised on the mast, and the boy narrator runs to tell his parents. As with his No, David! and its sequels, Shannon plays off the straight text. "I tried to tell Mom, but she was busy slathering my baby sister with sunblock" inspires an illustration of the mother being assaulted by the infant (which also explains why she doesn't notice the boy's prolonged absence). When the crew hits the beach, they discover they're lost ("We must have taken a wrong turn at Bora Bora"), note Jeremy's skills with a shovel ("We've been needin' a digger like yourself. We've a chest of treasure to bury") and whisk the willing boy away. The buccaneers prove an agreeable lot at first, teaching him sea chanteys, pirate lingo and table manners ("Down the hatch!"; "Hand over the meat!"). But when bedtime rolls around (Shannon depicts a pillow fight in full swing), the pirates won't tuck him in ("No tucking!") or read him a story. The text's vigorous chorus-like repetitions invite aspiring maties to join in, and Long's dry, tongue-in-cheek humor serves as an ideal springboard for Shannon's gleefully madcap illustrations. The pirates are about as ragtag and dentally challenged a group of scurvy salts as ever sailed the high seas, and a clever visual surprise brings the shipboard adventure to a close. Ages 3-7. (Sept.) Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information. Belongs to SeriesAwardsNotable Lists
Jeremy Jacob joins Braid Beard and his pirate crew and finds out about pirate language, pirate manners, and other aspects of their life. No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813.6Literature American literature in English American fiction in English 2000-LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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