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Cargando... The Easter Story (1993)por Brian Wildsmith
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Inscríbete en LibraryThing para averiguar si este libro te gustará. Actualmente no hay Conversaciones sobre este libro. Telling the story of Palm Sunday, Holy Week, the Passion, and Easter from the viewpoint of a donkey is a bit ... less than satisfactory, but the amazingly beautiful illustrations completely redeem the book. Probably ignoring the text and telling the story in one's own words would be the best way to "read" this book to a child. sin reseñas | añadir una reseña
The story of the last days of Jesus' life, the crucifixion, and the resurrection, as seen through the eyes of a small donkey. No se han encontrado descripciones de biblioteca. |
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Google Books — Cargando... GénerosSistema Decimal Melvil (DDC)232.96Religions Christian doctrinal theology Christ; Christology Family and life of Jesus Passion and death of JesusClasificación de la Biblioteca del CongresoValoraciónPromedio:
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I had hoped to get to The Easter Story before the recent holiday, but my library request for this and a few other titles was delayed, and I read it a few days after Easter. It scarcely matters, I suppose, as I think I would have enjoyed it, no matter the time of year. From a visual perspective, I found it an astonishingly beautiful book - the art is simply breathtaking, with vivid colors, brilliant use of gold tones and accents, and wonderfully stylized scenes. I loved pretty much everything about these paintings, from the angels to the landscape depictions of Jerusalem. If judged upon artwork alone, this would easily be a five-star title for me. Unfortunately, I found the narrative a little less appealing. Although I understand the choice to tell this story from the donkey's perspective, as a means of adding child appeal, I don't think it really works here. I recently read two different picture-books about Palm Sunday, specifically - Marni McGee's The Colt and the King and Michelle Medlock Adams's Little Colt's Palm Sunday - in which the story was told from the asinine perspective. It worked in those books, because the donkey does play a central role in Palm Sunday. But here, the presence of the donkey in various scenes - peering in the window at the Last Supper, observing the trial - strained my suspension of disbelief, and made me wish that Wildsmith had chosen a different focus for his retelling. I still would recommend this one, for those seeking children's retellings of the Easter story, but I recommend it more for the artwork and the general story, than for the specific storytelling focus. ( )