I scream, ice cream! A book of wordles?

Amy Krouse Rosenthal

Book - 2013

"What do 'I Scream!' and 'Ice Cream!' have in common? Nothing--besides the fact that they sound the same! The ever-surprising Amy Krouse Rosenthal unleashes her prolific wit in this silly and smart book of wordplay. Perfectly complemented by equally clever illustrations from the talented and internationally renowned Serge Bloch, this mind-bending book will have young readers thinking about words in an entirely new way!"--Provided by publisher.

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Subjects
Genres
Picture books
Published
San Francisco, California : Chronicle Books [2013]
Language
English
Main Author
Amy Krouse Rosenthal (author)
Other Authors
Serge Bloch (illustrator)
Physical Description
1 volume (unpaged ) : color illustrations ; 24 x 29 cm
Audience
Ages 5-6.
ISBN
9781452100043
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

The rest of us may know them as homophones, but author Rosenthal (Duck! Rabbit!, 2009) calls them wordles. Either way, they are groups of words that sound exactly the same but mean different things, as a cherub-faced, rosy-cheeked boy explains at the beginning of this title. Rosenthal's wordles range from the classic I scream / ice cream and the easily grasped ( reindeer / rain, dear ) to the somewhat more obscure, though amusing: sorry, no more funnel cakes / sorry, no more fun . . . elk aches. The central homophonic device may be lost on many children, who will simply come along for a potentially giggle-inducing ride. Bloch's rough figures, delineated with quirkily-shaped bodies, funny hair, and chortle-worthy expressions will go a long way toward enlivening the punch lines. The prime audience here will be slightly advanced readers of the age group and older children who share Rosenthal's love for wordplay. Pair this with William Steig's classic C D B! (1968) and Jon Agee's palindrome-centric titles.--Karp, Jesse Copyright 2010 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Rosenthal (Wumbers) expands her library of alphabetical and numerical wordplay books with a clever collection of "wordles," homophonic words and phrases. When accompanied by Bloch's (My Snake Blake) ebullient ink-scrawl drawings, the wordles make off-kilter picture stories. Some are simple ("Icy! Aye, sea!" shout pirates adrift in arctic waves), while others are startlingly elaborate. "Sorry, no more funnel cakes," explains a vendor to a line of amusement-park customers headed by a disappointed, green-faced clown. On the next spread, two elk clutch their abdomens in distress, having wolfed down the last of that vendor's supply: "Sorry, no more fun... elk aches." A boy has arrows pointing toward the relevant parts of his trousers-"Pants. Knees." He's holding a long leash, and a page turn reveals an exhausted, allergic dog at the other: "Pant... sneeze." A row of blobby people on parade make "A family affair"; doffing their hats a page later, they reveal wild coiffures, "A family of hair." Even beginning readers can decode or guess many of the wordless, and they will love Bloch's drawings-or are they "block straw wings"? Ages 5-up. Author's agent: Amy Rennert, Amy Rennert Agency. (May) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by School Library Journal Review

K-Gr 2-Rosenthal applies a generous dollop of humor and skill with wordplay to a presentation of wordles-not word images designed on an Internet site, but phonetically identical phrases with different meanings, resourcefully introduced by definition and example on the title-and surrounding pages. Gradually increasing in difficulty, each phrase pair presented in a series of black ink cartoon images and collage imposed on block prints challenges readers to guess the corresponding word or phrase before turning the page. "Reindeer" fly through the air-turn quickly and a caring mother sheltered by an umbrella explains, "Rain, dear." "I see" becomes "icy" or "Aye, sea." Bloch treats children to motion-filled pages with large-eyed, uncomfortable reindeer, a Snow White and crone stepmother dominated by a large apple, a sneezing dog, a pirate ship amid icebergs, objects flying to escape the page, and a final tribute to the author's Little Pea (Chronicle, 2005). While a few of these wordles may be a bit of a stretch, the whole is a challenging, playful exercise that encourages thinking out of the box and careful listening.-Mary Elam, Learning Media Services, Plano ISD, TX (c) Copyright 2013. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Horn Book Review

Rosenthal (Wumbers, rev. 11/12) has a remarkable knack for clever, participatory wordplay, and here she offers a series of wordles, a term she's coined for phrases that are homophones, as in the book's title I Scream, Ice Cream! Coming up with meaningful and humorous phrases that also happen to sound the same isn't exactly easy. Yet Rosenthal manages to do so again and again -- with crucial assistance from Bloch's gleefully silly mixed-media illustrations. Bloch's art is, in fact, what stages the scene for -- and often illuminates -- Rosenthal's wordle vignettes. Take "Princess cape," for example. With a page turn, readers read "Prince, escape!" and Bloch presents a prince bolting from a cape-wearing -- and quite hideous -- princess. Now and then, a young reader may be hard-pressed to guess the second (or third) wordle. There's a police line-up, for example, with the heading "WHO DID IT?" and an innocent-looking little girl with the caption: "Uh, not her." On the next page, suspects three and four are revealed to be "an otter" (who, unfortunately, isn't very otter-like in appearance) and "a knotter." But stumper or two aside, the antics here -- in word and art -- are laugh-out-loud funny. tanya d. auger (c) Copyright 2013. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

This playful collection of 14 ingeniously illustrated "wordles" introduces readers to homophones. Opening with a definition of wordles as "groups of words that sound exactly the same but mean different things," the text immediately offers examples "I scream/ice cream" and "heroes/he rows." Commencing the game, it challenges readers to guess the second wordle of each subsequent pair before turning the page. Guessing "rain, dear" for "reindeer" may be obvious, but other wordles prove more challenging. Guessing "icy" for "I see" is not a stretch, but a second option of "Aye, sea!" may be, without the visual context of a pirate ship. Indeed, the zany, clever multimedia illustrations, with their deceptively childlike figures drawn in stark, black outlines, create a humorous visual context for each wordle, spinning surprising links between verbal juxtapositions. "A family affair" is visually represented by a line of people wearing assorted headgear. Its wordle, "a family of hair," is visually cued with the same line of people raising their chapeaux to reveal wild hair. Likewise, the illustration for "princess cape" of a creepy princess in a cape trying to kiss a knight tied up in yarn is followed by the wordle "prince escape," showing the foiled princess throwing up her arms as the knight's foot disappears through a door. Witty wordplay guaranteed to tease and tickle. (Picture book. 5 up)]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.