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Books with author Verna Aardema

  • Bringing the Rain to Kapiti Plain

    Verna Aardema

    Paperback (Puffin Books, May 20, 1992)
    A cumulative rhyme relating how Ki-pat brought rain to the drought-stricken Kapiti Plain. Verna Aardema has brought the original story closer to the English nursery rhyme by putting in a cumulative refrain and giving the tale the rhythm of β€œThe House That Jack Built.”
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  • The Vingananee and the Tree Toad

    Verna Aardema

    Hardcover (Viking Books for Young Readers, June 15, 1989)
    A strange animal called the Vingananee beats up all the other animals and eats their stew until the tiny Tree Toad offers to fight him.
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  • Traveling to Tondo: A Tale of the Nkundo of Zaire

    Verna Aardema

    Paperback (Dragonfly Books, Dec. 28, 1993)
    Illus. in full color. "Bowane, the cat, has asked for the hand of a beautiful feline and is returning to his future wife's village with a basket of copper and trinkets. On the way, he invites one friend after another to accompany him. But delays stall the wedding party--for years--and when the entourage finally reaches Tondo, they are not welcome. This satisfying tale owes its success to a clean, straightforward telling and beautiful illustrations. Perfect for reading aloud, this is a traveling tale for all collections."--(starred) School Library Journal.
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  • Why Mosquitoes Buzz in People's Ears: A West African Tale

    Verna Aarderna

    Hardcover (Dial Books for Young Readers, March 15, 1975)
    In this West African folk tale, retold by Verna Aardema, a mosquito brags to an iguana that he spied a farmer digging yams as big as mosquitoes. The iguana scoffs at such a notion and refuses to listen to any more nonsense. Grumbling, he puts sticks in his ears and scuttles off through the reeds and sets off a chain reaction among myriad animals inhabiting the same landscape. The iguana offends a friendly python, who shoots down a rabbit hole and terrifies a rabbit. Seeing the rabbit scares a crow overhead, who spreads an alarm that danger is near. When a monkey reacts to the alarm, an owlet is killed, which sets off a wave of grieving in the mother owl so profound that she is unable to wake the sun each day with her hooting. The nights grow longer, and when the King Lion calls a meeting to get to the bottom of the situation, the chain of events is traced back to the source of all the trouble, the pesky mosquito. Finding the culprit satisfies the mother owl, who calls the sun back again. But, alas, the mosquito is forever plagued with a guilty conscience, compelling him forever to be a pest. The vibrant neo-primitive illustrations, which earned this title a Caldecott medal in 1976, enhance and embellish the tale. This is a timeless story sure to charm a wide range of readers and listeners.
  • The Vingananee and the Tree Toad

    Verna Aardema

    Paperback (Puffin Books, June 1, 1988)
    A strange animal called the Vingananee beats up all the other animals and eats their stew until the tiny Tree Toad offers to fight him.
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  • The Vingananee and the Tree Toad

    Verna Aardema

    Hardcover (Warne, Sept. 1, 1983)
    A strange animal called the Vingananee beats up all the other animals and eats their stew until the tiny Tree Toad offers to fight him.
  • Misoso: Once Upon a Time Tales from Africa

    Verna Aardema

    Hardcover (Knopf Books for Young Readers, Sept. 13, 1994)
    Illustrated in full color. From Angola to Zanzibar, this treasury is as varied and bountiful as Africa itself! Master storyteller Verna Aardema retells 12 tales of justice and revenge, greed and generosity, sly trickery, and off-the-wall silliness with her trademark humor and flair. Nearly 50 illustrations vibrantly reflect the spirit of these read-aloud delights, while a map of Africa, story source information, and a personal note from the author make this a rich volume for folk-tale lovers of all ages.
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  • the riddle of the drum, a tale from tizapan, mexico

    verna aardema

    Hardcover (Four Winds Press, March 15, 1979)
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  • The Lonely Lioness and the Ostrich Chicks

    Verna Aardema

    Hardcover (Knopf Books for Young Readers, Sept. 9, 1996)
    Illustrated in full color. Beloved storyteller Verna Aardema is at her finest in this African animal tale, weaving charm and suspense with a delightfully satisfying resolution. Peering down from her treetop perch, a lonely lioness admires the noisily cheeping clan of Mother Ostrich and thinks, "I would be happy to have just one child." So she leaps down, gurum! and steals all four ostrich chicks. Accepting the lioness as their mother, the chicks follow right behind he. Mother Ostrich is frantic! As she chases after the lioness, she enlists the help of gazelle, hyena, jackal, and mongoose. But which one can help her to get her chicks back? With art by Yumi Heo that blends primitive, African, and folk styles, The Lonely Lioness and the Ostrich Chicks is a captivating picture book destined to be a classic.
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  • Bringing the Rain to Kapiti Plain

    Verna Aardema

    Library Binding (Perfection Learning, May 1, 1992)
    The story of how Ki-pat ingeniously brings rain to the arid Kapiti Plain. Cumulative rhyming tale with the rhythm and repetition of The House That Jack Built . . . Illustrations are stylized, simple, and dramatic.--School Library Journal.
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  • Anansi Finds a Fool

    Verna Aardema

    Hardcover (Dial Books, Sept. 8, 1992)
    Lazy Ananse seeks to trick someone into doing the heavy work of laying his fish trap, but instead he is fooled into doing the job himself
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  • Bimwili and the Zimwi

    Verna Aardema

    Hardcover (Dial Books, Oct. 7, 1985)
    A Swahili girl is abducted by a Zimwi and told to be the voice inside his singing drum.
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