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Other editions of book The World Turns Round and Round

  • The World Turns Round and Round

    Nicki Weiss

    Hardcover (Greenwillow Books, Sept. 19, 2000)
    Whether you say mjomba or uncle, chachi or aunt, jidd or grandfather, you will recognize the love in the pages of this book. Whether your relatives live in Maine or Mexico, Colorado or Kenya, they are linked to you and you to them. The cultures that distinguish us and the families that connect us are cause for celebration in this book that shows that the world is smaller than we think.
    K
  • The World Turns Round and Round

    Nicki Weiss

    Paperback (Scholastic, March 15, 2002)
    "What was sent to the brown-eyed boy / From his abuela in Mexico? / From Tapalpa came a sombrero of straw. / Oh, he never saw / Such a sombrero of straw / From rural Mexico." So begins this charming book that describes various items of clothing sent from relatives around the world to the children in one class. An aunt in Colorado sends cowboy boots, a babushka in Russia sends a little furry hat, a mjomba in Kenya sends a dashiki, and a chachi in India sends a sari. Weiss's cheerful, colored-pencil drawings accompany the verses for each child. On one left-hand page, for example, the Haitian tante carries a box across a sandy beach. Small Haitian stamps decorate the edges of the picture. Facing this illustration is a drawing of a young girl proudly wearing her new "chemise aux fleurs." The final scene shows all of the classmates modeling their gifts and looking at a globe. The repetitive question-and-answer verse and chorus of "the world turns round and round" make this a natural choice for reading aloud. Helpful aids include a map and a small glossary with pronunciations.
  • World Turns Round and Round, The

    Nicki Weiss

    Library Binding (GreenWilBk, Sept. 19, 2000)
    Whether you say mjomba or uncle, chachi or aunt, jidd or grandfather, you will recognize the love in the pages of this book. Whether your relatives live in Maine or Mexico, Colorado or Kenya, they are linked to you and you to them. The cultures that distinguish us and the families that connect us are cause for celebration in this book that shows that the world is smaller than we think.
    J