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A Mouse Called Junction is a 1980 children's picture book by Julia Cunningham, with illustrations by Michael Hague.About a young mouse who ventures into the forest in search of emotions and is adopted by a rat, it received mixed reviews that praised Hague's illustrations but criticized the text and ending.
The Mouse and His Child is a novel by Russell Hoban first published in 1967. It has been described as "a classic of children's literature and is the book for which Hoban is best known." [1] It was adapted into an animated film in 1977. A new edition with new illustrations by David Small was released in 2001.
Children's novels about mice and rats (4 C, 37 P) Pages in category "Children's books about mice and rats" The following 61 pages are in this category, out of 61 total.
Mouse in House is a 1979 children's picture book, which gave Philadelphia artist and illustrator Judith Schermer her only such writing credit. The account of a turn-of-the-20th-century family who wrecks their home trying to get rid of a mouse, it was published by Houghton Mifflin to positive reviews.
Announced in July 1996, [10] A Mouse Told His Mother was published by Little, Brown in April 1997 [1] to critical acclaim. Publishers Weekly called it "a captivating picture book...[in which] Roberts's neatly condensed prose plays straight man to Begin's minutely detailed and lushly panoramic artwork, which catapults readers into the mouse child's imaginative alter-world."
Children's literature portal; Mouse Soup is a 1977 picture book by noted illustrator Arnold Lobel.Beginning with the simple sentence "A mouse sat under a tree", the book goes on to tell the story of a mouse who has to trick a weasel from turning him into mouse soup.
[1] and the School Library Journal wrote "Beautiful artwork with some double-page spreads show a spooky English cottage filled with interesting junk. Young audiences will never tire of finding the cat in each picture and joining in the refrain, "MOUSE, LOOK OUT!/THERE'S A CAT ABOUT."" [1] Kirkus Reviews described it as "A tale of mild suspense ...
Chrysanthemum is a young mouse who loves her unique name, until she is teased about it by her classmates. Her main tormentors are three mice named Jo, Rita and Victoria, who ridicule her for being named after a flower and point out that her name is so long it barely fits on a name tag.