Dance Is For Everyone

Author: Andrea Zuill

Stock information

General Fields

  • : 24.99 AUD
  • : 9781454921141
  • : Sterling Publishing Co Inc
  • : Sterling
  • :
  • :
  • : April 2017
  • : 27.60 cmmm X 21.60 cmmm X 1.30 cmmm
  • :
  • : 24.99
  • :
  • :
  • :
  • : books

Special Fields

  • :
  • :
  • : Andrea Zuill
  • :
  • : Hardback
  • :
  • :
  • : en
  • : 813.6
  • :
  • : 32
  • : Y
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Barcode 9781454921141
9781454921141

Description

Dancing is for EVERYONE. Even a 450-pound alligator!
 
An alligator dancing ballet? When the reptile takes her place at the barre, Mrs. Iraina and her dancers are very surprised. But since they can't communicate with the alligator--and she is able to follow along--they just decide to name her Tanya and let her stay. (Would YOU say no to a 450-pound alligator?) Mrs. Iraina even creates a special ballet to showcase Tanya's larger-than-life talents . . . and super-swishy tail. Then, without warning, Tanya disappears. Funny and irreverent, Dance Is for Everyone shows that, with just a little understanding, anyone can fit in--even a dancing alligator. 

"The illustrations are stylized and quirky, and the plot is engaging, with jokes that adults will appreciate peppered throughout. The narrative conveys the story's message of inclusion in a subtle manner, but the book's title makes this important theme abundantly clear. VERDICT A fun read-aloud and a welcome addition to medium and large collections, best shared one-on-one or in a small group setting." --School Library Journal

Reviews

"The students in Mrs. Iraina's dance class are surprised to be joined by an unexpected visitor. They invite her to stay, because 'who would be brave enough to tell a 450-pound alligator she couldn't?" In this sweet, humorous story about acceptance, Mrs. Iraina and the class display common sense, quick thinking, and good humor. They get a supply of Alligator Chow to prevent any inappropriate snacking and devise special choreography to showcase their new friend's talents. The class, three girls and a boy, delight in dressing as a duck, a turtle, a frog, and a raccoon for their production of an original ballet, The Legend of the Swamp Queen. The alligator disappears as suddenly as she arrived, but weeks later a special map is delivered, with an invitation for the class to attend a dance performance put on by . . . an actual duck, turtle, frog, raccoon, and a whole alligator family! Bright cartoon-style illustrations, detailed with black outlines and complete with comically expressive faces and gestures, perfectly suit the humorous premise." --Booklist "When Mrs. Iraina's ballet class gets an unexpected newcomer--an alligator--the diverse cast of students are surprised but decide to welcome her. They begin to affectionately refer to her as Tanya, after a famous ballerina, but her large tail quickly becomes a problem during practice. Together the students come up with a brand-new dance that showcases Tanya and her wild tail. The dance is a huge success at the recital, and Tanya happily returns to the wild, where she continues to dance with her animal friends. The illustrations are stylized and quirky, and the plot is engaging, with jokes that adults will appreciate peppered throughout. The narrative conveys the story's message of inclusion in a subtle manner, but the book's title makes this important theme abundantly clear. VERDICT A fun read-aloud and a welcome addition to medium and large collections, best shared one-on-one or in a small group setting." --School Library Journal -The students in Mrs. Iraina's dance class are surprised to be joined by an unexpected visitor. They invite her to stay, because 'who would be brave enough to tell a 450-pound alligator she couldn't?- In this sweet, humorous story about acceptance, Mrs. Iraina and the class display common sense, quick thinking, and good humor. They get a supply of Alligator Chow to prevent any inappropriate snacking and devise special choreography to showcase their new friend's talents. The class, three girls and a boy, delight in dressing as a duck, a turtle, a frog, and a raccoon for their production of an original ballet, The Legend of the Swamp Queen. The alligator disappears as suddenly as she arrived, but weeks later a special map is delivered, with an invitation for the class to attend a dance performance put on by . . . an actual duck, turtle, frog, raccoon, and a whole alligator family! Bright cartoon-style illustrations, detailed with black outlines and complete with comically expressive faces and gestures, perfectly suit the humorous premise.- --Booklist

Author description

Andrea Zuill's work shows in galleries in California, Texas and New York. She has exhibited in the San Diego Museum of Art and the Brand Library gallery, where she won the Disney Imagineering award.