
How Do You Wokka-Wokka?
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Description
"In an infectious burst of movement, rhythm, and rhyme, a multiethnic cast of children in an urban neighborhood strut their stuff." — School Library Journal (starred review)
Some days you wake up and you just gotta wokka. Wokka what? Wokka-wokka! It’s about movement. It’s about dance. It’s about shimmy-shakin’, be-boppin’, and more! It’s about gathering friends and joining the party. The creative team behind My Father, the Dog returns with a call-and-response for preschoolers, an exuberant invitation to be part of the fun — and show your stuff!
Some days you wake up and you just gotta wokka. Wokka what? Wokka-wokka! It’s about movement. It’s about dance. It’s about shimmy-shakin’, be-boppin’, and more! It’s about gathering friends and joining the party. The creative team behind My Father, the Dog returns with a call-and-response for preschoolers, an exuberant invitation to be part of the fun — and show your stuff!
Product Details
Publisher | Candlewick |
Publish Date | September 25, 2012 |
Pages | 32 |
Language | English |
Type | |
EAN/UPC | 9780763660857 |
Dimensions | 9.9 X 10.3 X 0.1 inches | 0.4 pounds |
About the Author
Elizabeth Bluemle is the author of Dogs on the Bed, illustrated by Anne Wilsdorf, and My Father the Dog, illustrated by Randy Cecil. Elizabeth Bluemle lives in Vermont, where she co-owns The Flying Pig Bookstore in Shelburne.
Randy Cecil is the author-illustrator of Gator and Duck and the illustrator of My Father the Dog by Elizabeth Bluemle, We’ve All Got Bellybuttons by David Martin, Looking for a Moose by Phyllis Root, and And Here's to You! by David Elliott. He lives in Houston, Texas.
Randy Cecil is the author-illustrator of Gator and Duck and the illustrator of My Father the Dog by Elizabeth Bluemle, We’ve All Got Bellybuttons by David Martin, Looking for a Moose by Phyllis Root, and And Here's to You! by David Elliott. He lives in Houston, Texas.
Reviews
In an infectious burst of movement, rhythm, and rhyme, a multiethnic cast of children in an urban neighborhood strut their stuff and celebrate their uniqueness.
—School Library Journal (starred review)
—School Library Journal (starred review)
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