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Milton and Odie and the Bigger-than-Bigmouth Bass

Mary Ann Fraser Mary Ann Fraser

$34.99

Hardback

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English
Imagine Publishing, Inc
01 October 2019
It's ice-fishing season for two very opposite otters. Pessimism, prepare to meet optimism!

On one side of a frozen lake, Odie imagines all the fish he'll catch today. On the other side of the lake, Milton is doubtful he'll catch anything at all. As each otter imagines what lurks--or doesn't lurk--under the ice, opposites attract, attitudes change, and a friendship is formed.
By:  
Illustrated by:   Mary Ann Fraser
Imprint:   Imagine Publishing, Inc
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 216mm,  Width: 279mm, 
Weight:   567g
ISBN:   9781623540982
ISBN 10:   1623540984
Pages:   32
Publication Date:  
Recommended Age:   From 4 to 8 years
Audience:   Children/juvenile ,  English as a second language
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Mary Ann Fraser is a fiction and nonfiction illustrator as well as an author in her own right. She has worked on more than sixty books for children, including Alexander Graham Bell Answers the Call, No Yeti Yet, and Heebie-Jeebie Jamboree.

Reviews for Milton and Odie and the Bigger-than-Bigmouth Bass

Polar-opposite otters find camaraderie in this read-aloud. Grumpy Milton and exuberant Odie are two adorable anthropomorphic otters on parallel ice-fishing pursuits. Dressed in muted greens and grays, Milton finds negativity in the old boot he fishes out of the frozen lake, criticizes his bait, and is less than enthused about crossing paths with the cheery Odie when Milton's line tugs Odie's fishing pole out of the water. With an exuberant, red-and-yellow plaid coat and bright blue hat and mittens, Odie sees possibilities and positives as readily as Milton can find the downside in anything. From their meeting, they learn about teamwork and experience a sweet role reversal after some success. While the pair of otters represents a type of emotional binary, the gently repetitive events in the story could well start conversations about ranges of emotions. Warmth is established through images of happy fish swimming beneath Odie (those beneath Miles matches glum mien), Odie's genuine smile, and emphasized onomatopoeia. Large, unfussy black type creatively shifts to fill negative space or snowy white landscapes. Combine this with Grumpy Pants (2016) by Claire Messer or Bernice Gets Carried Away (2015) by Hannah E. Harrison for a trio of reads that can offer some giggles while exploring emotions and friendship. Sunnily earnest. --Kirkus Reviews


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