Browse all books

Other editions of book Dr. Duck Book and Audiocassette Tape Set

  • Dr. Duck

    H.M. Ehrlich, Laura Rader

    Hardcover (Orchard Books, March 1, 2000)
    From morning until night Dr. Duck takes care of all the animals when they are ill by visiting them in his big red van, but who will take care of him when the good doctor gets sick?
    J
  • Dr. Duck

    H.M. Ehrlich, Laura Rader

    Paperback (Scholastic, Jan. 1, 2001)
    Dr. Duck takes care of all the animals when they are ill, but who will take care of him when he gets sick?
    J
  • Dr. Duck by H.M. Ehrlich

    H.M. Ehrlich

    Hardcover (Orchard Books, Jan. 1, 1675)
    None
  • Dr. Duck

    H. Ehrlich

    Hardcover (Blue Apple, Jan. 1, 2005)
    None
  • Dr. Duck

    H. M. Ehrlich

    Audio Cassette (Scholastic, April 1, 2001)
    Scholastic read-along cassette with turn-the-page signals to accompany Dr. Duck. Written by H.M. Ehrlich. Illustrated by Laura Rader. Read by Rick Adamson. Directed by Steve Blane. Music by Richard DeRosa. Produced by Blane & DeRosa Productions. Playing Time 4:37.
    J
  • Dr. Duck by H. M. Ehrlich

    H. M. Ehrlich

    Hardcover (Orchard Books (NY), March 15, 1854)
    None
  • Dr. Duck Book and Audiocassette Tape Set

    H.M. Ehrlich, Laura Rader, Rick Adamson

    Accessory (Scholastic Book Clubs Softcover Book and Audiocassette Tape, Jan. 1, 2001)
    This jolly picture book should prove the perfect elixir for young readers with a case of doctor-itis. Driving his big red van, Dr. Duck makes forest-, barnyard- and pasture-calls to treat his menagerie of patients, prescribing such remedies as "Cough syrup for a sheep/ Who had a bad flu/ Pink pills for a cow/ Too hoarse to moo" (dialogue balloons within the art show the duck telling the sheep, "This will do for the flu" and reassuring the cow, "Take two and you'll moo!"). But when Dr. Duck finds himself laid up with a terrible fever, who will care for him? Luckily his grateful patients come to the rescue and Dr. Duck is soon fit as a fiddle. In jaunty and sweet-natured rhymes, Ehrlich (who appears to be Harriet Ziefert, writing under a pseudonym) clearly expresses the rewards Dr. Duck reaps in his caring profession. Rader's pry and sunny watercolors capture a compassionate and friendly animal community at its best. Satisfied kids will soon attest that Dr. Duck is no quack.