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Hardcover Pierre in Love Book

ISBN: 0439517400

ISBN13: 9780439517409

Pierre in Love

Poor Pierre wishes he could tell Catherine how he feels about her, but Catherine is a graceful ballet teacher, and Pierre is merely a poor fisherman. By making a few silly mistakes and a few more... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Recommended

Format: Hardcover

Condition: Good

$5.29
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List Price $16.99
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Customer Reviews

4 ratings

Ah, Pennypacker.....

My daughter reports that her six year old daughter goes to sleep with this book. Don't you love giving a book to a child who loves reading it? Thank you Ms Pennypacker.

Book Review: Pierre in Love

If you flip to the back of "Pierre in Love", you'll find that the subject headings say a lot: 1. Love-Fiction. 2. Honesty-Fiction. 3. Fishers-Fiction. Yes, Sara Pennypacker's story is definitely about all of these things. However, throwing all rules and regs about subject headings out the window, I think they should have added the following: 4. Old School Mixup-Fiction. Similar to every episode of "Three's Company", this story is based around a miscommunication - let me explain. Pierre (a shabby-looking fisherman rat), finds himself too "bloopy and love-swoggled" to speak to his love, a ballet dancing rabbit named Catherine. Instead, he places a new gift on her doorstep each night. When they finally come face to face one evening, an unusually dapper-looking Pierre spills his guts. But Catherine denys him, explaining that she is in love with someone else, someone much more shabby in appearance. Now who could that someone else be? 5. Rarities for a Children's Book-Fiction. Picture book love stories for are a tricky thing to pull off successfully. In "Pierre", Pennypacker (of "Clementine" fame) and illustrator Petra Mathers successfully capture the feeling of being a nervous wreck when faced with unrequited love. This title recently won an SCBWI Golden Kite award for picture book text. I can't argue with that - the pace, description, and dialog are all succinct and vivid. After learning that Catherine is in love with someone else... Pierre staggered. The news socked him hard, like an anchor to the chest. "Well," he said, struggling to smile, "I'm glad to know you are happy." The illustrations, done in watercolor, do a good job of mixing the two dimensional with the three. They have an unusual quality of looking simple and very detailed at the same time - a nice combo for the intended audience. Go ahead and pick this one up. While you're reading, I'll be lobbying the H.W. Wilson Company to add my new subject headings to the list.

A Tracy and Hepburn Romance; One of the Best of the Year!

It's not the first time a mouse has fallen for a cat. This seemingly mismatched pair recalls the roughened edges of Tracy as sportswriter to Hepburn as Hepburn, particularly in "The Philadelphia Story." While Pierre the fisher-mouse IS French, he's more Marseilles than Paree, more accustomed to life at sea than the haberdashery. The object of his affection--in fact, his intense l'amour--is Catherine, the elegant artiste equally at home in the ballet studio or a painter's studio. When Pierre "steams out" by the coast he hears Catherine's voice, "Plie, mes enfants, plie! floating like a silver ribbon over the harbor." That's just one of many beautifully written sentences in this story of love, mistaken identity, and fish. The book's insightful take on love is astonishingly on target, adults will recognize the peaks and valleys of love's early course. For kids not averse to non-familial love, romance will never seem so appealing, so....romantic! Sara Pennypacker can also make them laugh tool; for example, when she describes how Pierre's obsessive longing for Catherine manifests itself with the day's catch: "Some clams three lobsters, a single bass. The blue scales reminded him of how much he wanted to speak to Catherine. Of course, everything reminded him of this," incliding "empty potato chip bags." There's even a fantasy sequence in which Pierre saves his beloved from a toothy shark. Catherine would exclaim, "'Oh, how can I ever thank you?' Then Pierre would shrug modestly--he practiced his shrug so e would be ready--and brush off her gratitude. 'Not at all,' he would say in a voice quite a bit deeper than his regular one'" Pierre vows that his daydreams will become reality, but because he has dressed up so much (even dying his moustache blacker with some squid ink), Catherine does not recognize him. She loves another, she tells him, crushing Pierre, and reminding Catherine that her love remains unrequited too, after all her intended is "an adventurer, bold and brave, and I'm only an ordinary ballet teacher. All I can do is paint pictures of him, and so I do, night after night." THe next morning, before returning to the sea, Pierre yells towards Catherine'sstudio what he himself has realized, that keeping your love a secret makes you miserable: "Tell him," he yells, "feelings are like tides, you can't hold them back!" Cupid finally prevails, and the two meet on shore in one of the most quietly but deeply ROMANTIC scenes I can recall in books for kids. Pennypacker again combines love and wit in her singular way: As they fly into each other's arms for an embrace, "Her heart gave a grand jete and his cueged as wild as a hurricane sea...or was it the other way around?" "It was impossible to say because their two hearts had become one." Petra Mathers, a four-time winner of the New YOrk Times prize Best Illustrated Children's Book, draws sumptious, enchanting sea- and landscapes, and her picture of Pierre's boat coming towards the docks is sump

Tells of an ordinary fisherman and a ballet teacher he secretly loves

Sara Pennypacker's PIERRE IN LOVE features pictures by Petra Mathers as it tells of an ordinary fisherman and a ballet teacher he secretly loves. Pierre can't get the courage to tell her how he really feels - and PIERRE IN LOVE involves kids in a gentle romance and friendship between a mouse and a bunny.
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