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Sometimes I like to Curl Up in a Ball

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Walker Books Ltd 05 Nov 2020 AustraliaDescription: 24pISBN:
  • 9781760652951
DDC classification:
  • YL/F/CHU
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Notes Date due Barcode Item holds
Kids Books Kids Books Colombo Children's Area Fiction YL/F/CHU Checked out Age Group 5 - 7 years (Green Tag) 27/05/2025 CY00028459
Kids Books Kids Books Kandy Children's Area Fiction YL/CHU Checked out 24/05/2025 YB144202
Kids Books Kids Books Kandy Children's Area Fiction YL/CHU Available

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YB142890
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

The first book in the internationally-beloved Little Wombat series about a playful little wombat exploring and adventuring through the world around him.

Sometimes I like to curl up in a ball, So no one can see me, Because I'm so small.

Little Wombat spends a day doing his favourite things: strutting around and around like a pigeon until he falls down, sticking out his tongue and pulling funny faces. And then he jumps as high as he can and sees how much noise he can make when he lands. But when the sun sets and the day ends he does the thing he likes best of all: going back home to his mother and curling into a ball. Good night!

Reviews provided by Syndetics

Publishers Weekly Review

With a repertoire of comic expressions worthy of Nathan Lane, a plump wombat invites readers to join with him and his pals (which include a koala, a mole and a frog) in a full day of unbridled goofing off. This book from a British duo is silly to the core, but it's also a pointed paean to the power of unscheduled play. Along with curling up like a ball, "so no one can see me because I'm so small," the wombat also explains in simple couplets that sometimes the hero likes to "walk round and round" with pigeons until he falls down dizzy, cover himself in mud and make faces. In the middle of the book the friends hold a race, and it's clear that Fuge relishes the opportunity to show each sprinter striving for a highly idiosyncratic personal best (a centipede marching in close second will illicit giggles) while a gallery of insects cheers. Wombat ends his day doing "what I do best of all," curled up beside his loving mom in their tree trunk home. After working so hard at having fun, no one will begrudge this little ball of bonhomie a well-deserved rest. Ages 2-5. (Oct.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

Horn Book Review

A young wombat plays with his friends in the woods, on a beach, and in the desert. But as night falls, he goes home and sleeps curled up with his parent. Written in a simple rhyming style and illustrated with action-filled watercolors, the text is a bit precious, but this is a diverting look at an independent child who still loves the security of home. From HORN BOOK Spring 2002, (c) Copyright 2010. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

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