Showing posts with label Lion vs. Rabbit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lion vs. Rabbit. Show all posts

Sunday, June 2, 2013

Lion vs. Rabbit

I came home exhausted on the last day of school to find a package waiting from Peachtree Publishers.  I was quite excited to find the package waiting and was even more excited to open it to find a new book by Alex Latimer.  My students enjoyed Latimer's other books:  The Boy Who Cried Ninja and Penguin's Hidden Talent.

Lion vs. Rabbit
Latimer's new book, Lion vs. Rabbit, will arrive on August 1st;  just in time for back to school book shopping and Picture Book 10 for 10!

Lion is a bully.  He does mean things to everyone.  The animals decide they need to stop him, but no one is brave enough to try.  They decide to advertise and soon animals arrive from other places to try, but no one can stop Lion.  One day, Rabbit comes to help.  Lion laughs, wondering how a small rabbit can possibly stop him.  Can Rabbit change Lion's bullying ways?  You'll have to read to find out.

Students will love the illustrations Latimer has created.  Latimer has created many animal characters to try to stop Lion.  There is much going on in each illustration as Lion boxes, jousts, and works his way through many challenges.  There are also little clues hidden in the pictures that young readers may begin to notice as the story nears the end.  Latimer also uses speech bubbles embedded within the illustrations to help tell more about what the characters are thinking.  I know young readers enjoy these little "tricks" illustrators use to make their stories interesting.

Book Possibilities
There are so many reasons this book will be in our classroom library when school begins again in August.  In the beginning the story starts with rabbit and lion "stat cards."  There are so many examples of different ways we use writing in our world.  There are stat cards, advertisements, and signs.

The story structure is one young readers can easily follow.  Young readers are always interested in "vs." stories.  This past year my young writers kept trying to write "vs." stories.  It was a difficult genres for them to master.  They were good at writing scenes of confrontations, but had a hard time creating an underlying problem that needed solved.  This book will be just the mentor text for this type of writing.  The story structure is clear.  The problem is evident.  The events are funny.  The solution is perfect.  I always enjoy using books as mentor texts where the author is both illustrator and writer, just like the writers in our classroom.

While this book would be engaging in any reading discussion, I think it is one that really speaks to inferring.   Latimer really makes you think.  Rabbit and Lion challenge each other to many events, but rabbit often wins.  How is that rabbit can win so many events?  There are clues in the story that help readers to know before reading the end.

Students Will Love It!
Most of all, this book will be on our shelf because I know my young readers will want to read it again and again.  They will enjoy the humor in the story, the speech bubbles, and the illustrations.  The characters Latimer has created are hard to resist.  I know it is a book that will go home with young readers again and again.