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Books in August House Little Folk series

  • Tuck-Me-In Tales

    Margaret Read MacDonald, Yvonne Davis

    Paperback (August House, Dec. 13, 2005)
    Selected as Outstanding by the Parent Council Best Books for BedtimeAround the world each night, parents tell stories to children as they put them to bed. Margaret Read MacDonald―a folklorist, storyteller, and children's librarian―uses bedtime tales in the daytime to end her story hours on a calm note. Here she includes five of her favorite folktales from around the world.“Chin Chin Kobokama” tells the story of a young Japanese girl who overcomes her fear of the dark―and learns there are good reasons to clean up her room. “Snow Bunting's Lullaby,” a lovely Siberian tale, shows the lengths to which Papa and Mama Bunting must go to protect their children―and get them to sleep. A South American tale explains the movement of the sun and moon. And “Kanji-Jo, the Nestling,” a lively Liberian tale, shows, as so many folk stories do, that there's no place like home. In elegant, finely detailed watercolors, artist Yvonne Davis joins MacDonald in guiding the reader on a bedtime trip around the world.
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  • Why Alligator Hates Dog

    J. J. Reneaux

    Paperback (August House, Dec. 13, 2005)
    In the Cajun country of Louisiana, Alligator is king of the swamps king to everyone that is, except sassy old Dog. Storyteller J.J. Reneaux's musical rendering of this old folktale explains how the feud between Alligator and Dog got started in the first place. When Alligator finally corners Dog in his swamphole, he falls for the oldest trick in the book. Next time, he promises, he'll get that Dog for sure. But will he?
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  • Jack and the Animals: An Appalachian Folktale

    Donald Davis

    Paperback (August House, Dec. 13, 2005)
    When Jack leaves his Appalachian home to seek his fortune, he finds it in a roundabout way. Along the way he assembles a group of traveling companions that includes a dog, a cat, a rooster, a donkey, and a cow. As night falls and they grow hungry, they come upon an abandoned farmhouse ... Or is it?
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