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Yertle the Turtle and Other Stories | 
| Author: Dr. Seuss Brand: Random House
List Price: $14.95 Buy Used: $0.21 as of 9/4/2010 20:00 PDT details
Seller: internationalbooks Rating: 38 reviews
Media: Hardcover Edition: First Edition Reading Level: Ages 4-8 Pages: 96 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1 Dimensions (in): 11.3 x 8.3 x 0.5
MPN: 9780394800875 ISBN: 0394800877 EAN: 9780394800875
Publication Date: April 12, 1958 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| • | ISBN13: 9780394800875 | | • | Condition: New | | • | Notes: BUY WITH CONFIDENCE, Over one million books sold! 98% Positive feedback. Compare our books, prices and service to the competition. 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description Three modern fables in humorous pictures and verse: Yertle the Turtle, Gertrude McFuzz, and The Big Brag. Author: Dr. SeussAges: Preschool and upFormat: 96 pages, HardcoverPublisher: Random House Books for Young Readers (April 12, 1958) ISBN: 978-0394800875
Amazon.com Review Yet more wisdom cast down from high atop Mt. Seuss, this cheerful trio of tales teaches some valuable lessons in humility--thanks to a sharp-eyed worm, a bragging bear and rabbit, a fuzzy-tailed bird, and a couple hundred turtles led by their foolish King Yertle. Yertle's story leads off with his attempt to build a bigger kingdom on the backs of his loyal subjects (literally). King of everything he can see, Yertle orders his turtles to stack up under him to build a towering throne. ("He made each turtle stand on another one's back and he piled them all up in a nine-turtle stack.") But a plain little turtle named Mack--stuck at the bottom--decides he's had enough. ("I know up on top you are seeing great sights, but down on the bottom we, too, should have rights!") Following Yertle's downfall, a whiny girl-bird named Gertrude McFuzz wishes she had two feathers, just like Miss Lolla-Lee-Lou: "One droopy-droop feather. That's all that she had. And, oh! That one feather made Gertrude so sad." But even when Gertrude gets her wish--and then some--she finds that vanity has its price. Meanwhile, in "The Big Brag," a proud rabbit and an even-prouder bear duke it out in a battle of the senses, arguing over who's the best of the beasts, only to get their clever comeuppance from a wild-eyed little worm. (Ages 4 to 8) --Paul Hughes
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| Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 38
love this book May 21, 2010 M.F. (germany) I love this book, I think it teaches a great lesson in disguise. I usually don't "get" some of Suess's short stories (not a fan of one fish two fish) but this book is good! Things make sense (haha) and the stories flow very well. Love yertle the turtle, for sure, too cute! my 2 year old and 7 year old enjoy when I read this book to them
Dr. Seuss. Writer. Poet. Revolutionary? May 16, 2010 Ulyyf (NYC) Well, he certainly had an interest in sharing political views. Whether this is good or bad depends, I guess, on whether you agree with him. He did it in a way that's not too preachy or annoying, that's a point in his favor.
Here we have three stories, whose names I don't care to remember at this time. (The book is visiting Grandma with my nieces, so I have to post from memory. Forgive me.)
In the first one - Yertle the Turtle! - we have a grandiose turtle king who insists on stacking all the turtles in his kingdom so he can see more and more and be king of more and more. And so it goes on until the one at the bottom, poor Mack, decides that he has rights too and shakes the whole throne. And now all turtles are free, the way turtles (and all people) are meant to be.
Then we have one about a bird who wants more and more feathers until... okay, I can't remember this one, but it's a moral about selfishness and vanity (I believe).
And the third, which I adore, is about a bear and a rabbit arguing over who is best until they're bested by a worm who claims he can see "all the way around the world" but, alas, all he sees is two big fools with nothing better to do than to argue about who is better than who!
So we have three good stories, three easy morals (two and a half? I cannot, for the life of me, remember that middle moral!), and a nifty green cover. I like this book a lot.
One note: This book is written for school-aged children. Please, don't get it for your baby.
Yertle review March 8, 2010 Julie McNeal (HUMBLE, TX, US) Book was in perfect condition. It came quickly. What else could you ask for? Julie
Party edition Dr. Seuss January 6, 2010 sabby The copy of Yertle we received is the party edition, with a metallic green hardcover; I wanted the old style cover. Still, a party cover is appropriate for a birthday gift, binding seems solid, and it is the original everything else we love. Great lesson in the Yertle story, where the turtle king learns a lesson about wanting too much when he should be content with his comfortable, happy existence. Another story is a lesson about the perils of bragging too much...Fun book that teaches good values.
Our favorite Seuss book! November 24, 2009 B Davis We read this book over and over when the boys were little. Now I am buying it for my first grandchild. I am looking forward to introducing him to this wonderful book.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 38
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