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Summary
Summary
Do you know how to scare a bear? Would you bang pots and pans? Would you rattle some cans? Would you shout? Would you yell? Would you ring a loud bell? Do you know how to scare a bear? How would you scare a bear out of your cabin? Or out of your fishing boat? How about away from your campfire? And what if he climbed in your bunk? Would the bed go kerplunk? From the author-illustrator team who created Moose on the Loose comes yet another example of the high jinks and hilarity that happens when wildlife wanders indoors. In this contest of wills, who will win? And once again, by story's end, young campers will know exactly how to scare a bear!
Author Notes
Kathy-Jo Wargin was born in Minnesota and studied Music Composition at the University of Minnesota-Duluth. She has been a professional writer for over 20 years. She is dedicated to the promotion and creation of quality literature for children. She is also the President of Book Bridge Press. In 2001 she won the Children's Choice award for her book, The legend of the Loon.
(Bowker Author Biography)
Reviews (3)
School Library Journal Review
PreS-Gr 1-The creative team behind Moose on the Loose (Sleeping Bear, 2009) has produced another humorous animal escapade. The text begins with a notice pinned to a tree: "Do you know how to scare a bear?" and continues with bouncy rhymes acted out by children: "Would you bang pots and pans?/Would you rattle some cans?/Would you shout?/Would you yell?/Would you ring a loud bell?" The bear becomes bolder and the text accelerates until finally the youngsters scare it into running off the page. The colorful cartoonlike pictures are energetic and full of detail, such as a moose on the loose on several pages. A fun read-aloud.-Carrie Rogers-Whitehead, Kearns Library, UT (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Publisher's Weekly Review
From the team behind Moose on the Loose comes another story about a renegade forest animal. Five friends at a campground notice a sign on a tree that reads, "Do you know how to scare a bear?" and discover the answer-no-when one shows up. Though his goofy, overgrown appearance isn't especially threatening (by book's end, he's wearing a red baseball cap), he's just naturalistic enough to be unsettling, especially when he goes snout-to-nose with a redheaded girl in pigtails. Becoming a furry nuisance, the bear joins them in their rowboat ("What if that bear wants to fish from your boat?/ Do you think he would fit?/ Would you tell him to sit?"), sits down at a picnic table for dinner, and even joins in a sleepover, taking a belly flop onto a top bunk. In the end, though, the kids discover that it's pretty simple to scare a bear with a single word, "Boo!" The attention and detail Bendall-Brunello lavishes on the bear doesn't carry over to the kids he antagonizes, but the fish-out-of-water slapstick should get some chuckles. Ages 4-8. (May) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Horn Book Review
The team behind Moose on the Loose is back. This time around, Wargin's bouncy rhymes and Bendall-Brunello's humor-filled illustrations star a big brown bear who wreaks havoc at a campsite: "If he climbed in your bunk, / would the bed go kerplunk?" As in Moose, it's an adult-provided solution that saves the day--to scare a bear, "Just say... Boo! (c) Copyright 2010. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted. All rights reserved.