No! I Won't Go to School
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Description
Zombies, monsters, and dragons stalk this book's pages. Cries of despair echo through them. Prisons and dungeons lie in wait. Is this a nightmare? Is it an apocalypse? Well, yes--because it's the day before our narrator's first day of school, and all entreaties to his mother are falling on deaf ears. Why should he go to school when he already knows two letters, "N" and "O," and he knows they spell NO!, which is exactly the word this occasion demands? Why aren't these magic letters working anymore?
Lexile Level 490; F&P Level L
Product Details
Price
$16.95
$15.76
Publisher
Tilbury House Publishers
Publish Date
July 10, 2018
Pages
32
Dimensions
9.3 X 10.2 X 0.6 inches | 0.9 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9780884486466
BISAC Categories:
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Become an affiliateAbout the Author
ALONSO NÚNEZ was born in 1969 in Mexico City, and his parents named him after the literary world's most beloved lunatic, Alonso el Bueno, better known as Don Quixote of La Mancha. He is the author of several bestselling children's books in Mexico, which have been translated to Chinese, Korean, and Portuguese. NO! is Alonso's first English-language children's book.
BRUNA ASSIS BRASIL was born in Curitiba, Brazil, in 1986. She majored in Journalism and Graphic Design, later specializing in Illustration, at the Escola de Disseny i Art in Barcelona. Bruna has illustrated more than 40 books and won the Jabuti Prize, Brazil's highest award for children´s illustrations, in 2016. She also won the 2015 Açorianos Prize for Literature, and her work was selected in 2012 and 2016 for Crescer magazine's Thirty Best Children's Books of the Year in Brazil.
DAVE MORRISON is the author of twelve volumes of poetry, including Clubland, Cancer Poems, and Psalms.
Reviews
A child's imagination inflates school fears in Mexico-based author Núñez's first English-language book...In sophisticated pen-and-ink and photographic collages, Brazilian illustrator Brasil renders the teacher as a hydra and the school bus as a horned monster, and sharp-featured students wear expressions of wide-mouthed terror...Núñez is effective at conveying the sense of doom that ruminating on the unknown can bring, while Brasil's art blends creaturely details and photographic accents to stylized effect.-- "PW" (6/4/2018 12:00:00 AM)
A boy walks readers through his concerns about his first day of school: "Now I'm in the belly / of this monstrous bus. / The driver's a zombie / who won't talk to us." The story follows the expected school-isn't-so-bad path, and the rhymes (translated from the Spanish) drop the odd beat, but elevating the affair is the surrealism-tinged art reflecting the kid's imagination.--Nell Beram "The Horn Book Guide" (8/12/2019 12:00:00 AM)
A boy walks readers through his concerns about his first day of school: "Now I'm in the belly / of this monstrous bus. / The driver's a zombie / who won't talk to us." The story follows the expected school-isn't-so-bad path, and the rhymes (translated from the Spanish) drop the odd beat, but elevating the affair is the surrealism-tinged art reflecting the kid's imagination.--Nell Beram "The Horn Book Guide" (8/12/2019 12:00:00 AM)