Madeline in London (Madeline Books)
Pb)
Ludwig Bemelmans
ISBN: | 9780812430080 |
Publisher: | Perfection Learning Prebound |
Published: | 1 May, 2000 |
Format: | Hardcover |
Language: | English |
Editions: |
34 other editions
of this product
|
- Mad about Madeline
- Madeline
- Madeline Audio Collection
- Madeline In America
- Madeline Loves Animals
- Madeline Loves Animals
- Madeline Playtime Activity Book
- Madeline Says Merci
- Madeline and Her Dog
- Madeline and the Bad Hat
- Madeline and the Cats of Rome
- Madeline and the Gypsies
- Madeline and the Gypsies
- Madeline and the Old House in Paris
- Madeline at the White House
- Madeline in America and Other Holiday Tales
- Madeline in London
- Madeline in Texas
- Madeline's Christmas
- Madeline's Christmas
- Madeline's House
- Madeline's House
- Madeline's House: Madeline, Madeline's Rescue and Madeline and the Bad Hat
- Madeline's Rescue
- Madeline's Tea Party
Madeline in London (Madeline Books)
Pb)
Ludwig Bemelmans
What on earth could make Miss Clavel, Madeline, and her 11 nameless classmates leave belle Paris for the tea-and-crumpeted, sometimes trumpeted city of London? A mission to cheer up the lonely, thin, increasingly despondent Pepito, son of the Spanish ambassador, who had to move away from his house next door to Madeline's in Paris. In their efforts to cheer him up, and for a birthday surprise, Miss Clavel and the girls buy him a retired horse. All is fine until the horse gallops off at the sound of the trumpet to take his place at the head of the queen's Life Guards (his occupation before retiring). As readers whoosh through busy London scenes, we forget the horse has had nothing to eat all day. Upon his return to Pepito's home, he eats everything in sight: "The gardener dropped his garden hose. / There wasn't a daisy or a rose. / 'All my work and all my care / For nought! Oh, this is hard to bear.'" Meanwhile, as the horse is passed out from exhaustion and overeating, Pepito's mother says he has to go. And so Madeline and the others take the horse home with them to Paris, where "They brushed his teeth and gave him bread, / And covered him up / and put him to bed." Ludwig Bemelmans charms us again with the uniquely skewed logic and matter-of-fact madness of childhood that young readers will adore. (Ages 4 to 8) --Karin Snelson
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