Afbeelding auteur

Maryann Dobeck

Auteur van The Party

69 Werken 1,486 Leden 4 Besprekingen

Over de Auteur

Werken van Maryann Dobeck

The Party (1999) 353 exemplaren
Dear Butterflies . . . (2004) 82 exemplaren
Jump Right In (1901) 69 exemplaren
The Sea (Fountas and Pinnell) (2009) 56 exemplaren
Stop That! (1901) 50 exemplaren
Blast Off! (1996) 50 exemplaren
Kangaroo in the Kitchen (1901) 47 exemplaren
A Box of Butterflies (2004) 45 exemplaren
Me too! (Invitations to literacy) (1996) 45 exemplaren
Six Go By (1901) 40 exemplaren
The Moon (2010) 32 exemplaren
Queen on a Quilt (1901) 30 exemplaren
Weather or Not (2002) 23 exemplaren
Home Sweet Home (2009) 21 exemplaren
An Ant Nap (2002) 20 exemplaren
Tim's Lost Fan (2002) 15 exemplaren
Three Fables (2002) 14 exemplaren
All About Animal Babies (2009) 14 exemplaren
Jump (2009) 13 exemplaren
What Is Very Long? (2009) 13 exemplaren
FROM NEST TO BIRD (2008) 12 exemplaren
Little Cat, Big Cat (2009) 11 exemplaren
Baking (2009) 10 exemplaren
Down by the pond (Story box) (2000) 10 exemplaren
Birds (2006) 10 exemplaren
Ant Can't (2009) 10 exemplaren
Smart Riddles (1997) 6 exemplaren
Lady Liberty (Twig books) (2000) 5 exemplaren
TRUCKS (2008) 5 exemplaren
Pop It, Toss It! (Bw) (2002) 4 exemplaren
Goat's New Hat 4 exemplaren
An Airplane for Pig 3 exemplaren
Fire Trucks and Fireboats (2019) 3 exemplaren
Getting Fire for people (2009) 3 exemplaren
City Hawks 3 exemplaren
Gandhi (2001) 3 exemplaren
A Builder's Dream 3 exemplaren
Pig Loves Rain! 2 exemplaren
About How Many? 2 exemplaren
A Win-Win Situation (2001) 2 exemplaren
The gift (2001) 2 exemplaren
The Van 1 exemplaar
Our American Folklore (2004) 1 exemplaar
Hot, Hot, Hot (Saxon) (2002) 1 exemplaar
Frank's Gift for the King (1997) 1 exemplaar
Hop on the Mop (Bw) (2002) 1 exemplaar
A Fish for Bald Eagle (2019) 1 exemplaar
Frog Ran (2002) 1 exemplaar

Tagged

Algemene kennis

Geslacht
female

Leden

Besprekingen

A dragon comes and terrifies a small Polish village in this early-reader retelling of a traditional folktale. Fortunately, a brave and clever man named Krakus leads the villagers in their efforts to be rid of the beast, baking a cake with such spicy ingredients that the dragon flees before him. In gratitude, the villagers make Krakus their king, and their village is renamed Krakow after him...

The tale of King Krakus and the dragon is well attested in Polish folklore, and can be found in Richard Monte's The Dragon of Krakow and Other Polish Stories, as well as Janina Domanska's picture-book, King Krakus and the Dragon. In both of those tellings, Krakus is already a king, and the dragon is defeated with the help of a clever shoemaker. I'm not sure if this telling, in which Krakus becomes a king through defeating the dragon, and utilizes a baker rather than a shoemaker, represents a traditional variant of the tale, or if it is an adaptation unique to author Maryann Dobeck. Either way, I think I prefer the telling of Monte and Domanska to this one.

It's interesting to note that this early reader, intended for students in the third grade, was published in the same year (2004) and by the same publisher (Houghton Mifflin) as The Dragon of Krakow: A Polish Folktale, which was also written by Dobeck and illustrated by Krystyna Stasiak. I read the two side by side, and they are essentially the same book - the same cover image, the same page layout, the same illustrations, the same story - save for very slight differences in text. I'm at a loss to understand the simultaneous publication of the two titles. At first I thought that they must be intended for slightly different age groups, as The Dragon of Krakow has slightly more complicated vocabulary, and more complex sentence structures, but WorldCat lists them both as being suitable for Grade 3. It's a puzzle! Leaving that aside, I can't say I enjoyed this one very much, especially in light of the far better retellings of this tale that I have read, and I would probably have given it a single star, if I hadn't enjoyed Stasiak's colorful folk-style illustrations. Recommended primarily to fans of the artist.
… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
AbigailAdams26 | Jul 10, 2020 |
A dragon comes and terrifies a small Polish village in this early-reader retelling of a traditional folktale. Fortunately, a brave and clever man named Krakus leads the villagers in their efforts to be rid of the beast, baking a cake with such spicy ingredients that the dragon flees before him. In gratitude, the villagers make Krakus their king, and their village is renamed Krakow after him...

The tale of King Krakus and the dragon is well attested in Polish folklore, and can be found in Richard Monte's The Dragon of Krakow and Other Polish Stories, as well as Janina Domanska's picture-book, King Krakus and the Dragon. In both of those tellings, Krakus is already a king, and the dragon is defeated with the help of a clever shoemaker. I'm not sure if this telling, in which Krakus becomes a king through defeating the dragon, and utilizes a baker rather than a shoemaker, represents a traditional variant of the tale, or if it is an adaptation unique to author Maryann Dobeck. Either way, I think I prefer the telling of Monte and Domanska to this one.

It's interesting to note that this early reader, intended for students in the third grade, was published in the same year (2004) and by the same publisher (Houghton Mifflin) as Krakus and the Dragon: A Polish Folktale, which was also written by Dobeck and illustrated by Krystyna Stasiak. I read the two side by side, and they are essentially the same book - the cover image, the same page layout, the same illustrations, the same story - save for very slight differences in text. I'm at a loss to understand the simultaneous publication of the two titles. At first I thought that they must be intended for slightly different age groups, as The Dragon of Krakow has slightly more complicate vocabulary, and more complex sentence structures, but WorldCat lists them both as being suitable for Grade 3. It's a puzzle! Leaving that aside, I can't say I enjoyed this one very much, especially in light of the far better retellings of this tale that I have read, and I would probably have given it a single star, if I hadn't enjoyed Stasiak's colorful folk-style illustrations. Recommended primarily to fans of the artist.
… (meer)
 
Gemarkeerd
AbigailAdams26 | 1 andere bespreking | Jul 10, 2020 |
Short, as is not surprising for a leveled reader, but also surprisingly charming.  I'd love to see 'real' picture-books by Dobeck and/or Stasiak.
½
 
Gemarkeerd
Cheryl_in_CC_NV | 1 andere bespreking | Jun 6, 2016 |

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Statistieken

Werken
69
Leden
1,486
Populariteit
#17,279
Waardering
½ 2.6
Besprekingen
4
ISBNs
107

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