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Other editions of book The Five Chinese Brothers

  • The Five Chinese Brothers

    Claire Huchet Bishop, Kurt Wiese

    Paperback (Puffin Books, June 18, 1996)
    The classic picture book about five clever brothers, each with a different extraordinary ability, has been in print for almost 80 years. "An original nonsense tale told with...spirit and gusto." -- The Horn Book
    K
  • The Five Chinese Brothers

    Clair Bishop, Owen Jordan, Weston Woods Studios

    Audiobook (Weston Woods Studios, Jan. 4, 2012)
    Five brothers who all look alike outwit the townspeople who condemned one of them to death.
  • The Five Chinese Brothers

    Claire Huchet Bishop, Kurt Wiese

    Hardcover (G.P. Putnam's Sons Books for Young Readers, Oct. 7, 1938)
    The classic picture book about five clever brothers, each with a different extraordinary ability, has been in print for almost 80 years. "An original nonsense tale told with...spirit and gusto." -- The Horn Book
    P
  • The Five Chinese Brothers

    Claire H. Bishop, Kurt Wiese

    School & Library Binding (Turtleback Books, June 18, 1996)
    FOR USE IN SCHOOLS AND LIBRARIES ONLY. Five brothers who look just alike outwit the executioner by using their extraordinary individual talents.
    K
  • The Five Chinese Brothers

    Claire Huchet Bishop

    Hardcover (Putnam Juvenile, May 18, 1989)
    The classic story of the Five Chinese Brothers, who use their extraordinary physical abilities to save the life of the First Chinese Brother, unfairly condemned to death for the accidental drowning of a selfish and naughty boy.
    K
  • The Five Chinese Brothers

    Claire Huchet Bishop, Kurt Wiese

    Library Binding (Perfection Learning, June 18, 1996)
    The classic story about five clever brothers, each with a different extraordinary ability is "a dramatic retelling of an old Chinese tale." (The New York Public Library)." . . . when Bishop makes the tall brother stretch, the sea-swallower work, or the robust one hold his breath, young children will laugh and laugh."--"New York Herald Tribune Books." Full color.
    L
  • The five Chinese brothers

    Claire Huchet Bishop

    Unknown Binding (Scholastic Book Services, Jan. 1, 1972)
    None
    K
  • The Five Chinese Brothers

    Claire Huchet Bishop, Kurt Wiese

    Hardcover (Coward-McCann, June 1, 1938)
    The classic story about five clever brothers, each with a different extraordinary ability is "a dramatic retelling of an old Chinese tale". (The New York Public Library)". . . . when Bishop makes the tall brother stretch, the sea-swallower work, or the robust one hold his breath, young children will laugh and laugh".--New York Herald Tribune Books. Full color.
  • The Five Chinese Brothers

    Claire Huchet Bishop, Kurt Wiese

    Paperback (Scholastic Book Service, June 1, 1979)
    Five brothers work together to stop their first brother from being put to death unfairly.
  • The Five Chinese Brothers

    Claire Huchet Bishop, Kurt Wiese

    Paperback (Scholastic Book Services, Jan. 1, 1975)
    None
  • The Five Chinese Brothers

    Claire Huchet Bishop

    Paperback (Scholastic, Jan. 1, 1967)
    None
    K
  • The Five Chinese Brothers

    Claire Huchet Bishop, Kurt Wiese

    Paperback (Scholastic book Services, Jan. 1, 1962)
    Long ago in China lived a family with five brothers who resembled each other very closely. They each possessed a special talent. One can swallow the sea; one has an iron neck; one can stretch his legs; one can survive fire; and the last can hold his breath forever. When one of the brothers, a somehow very successful fisherman, agrees to let a young boy accompany him on his fishing trip, trouble results. This brother holds the entire sea in his mouth so that the boy can retrieve fish and treasures. When the man can no longer hold in the sea, he frantically signals to the boy, but the boy ignores him and drowns when the man releases the water. The man is accused of murder and sentenced to death. However, one by one, his four brothers assume his place when subjected to execution, and each uses his own superhuman ability to survive (one cannot be beheaded, one cannot be drowned, one cannot be burned, and one cannot be smothered). At the end of the story, a judge decides that the brother accused of murder must have been innocent, since he could not be executed, and the five brothers return home.