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Addis Berner Bear Forgets

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: UK Random House Children's Publishers UK 2008Description: 32pISBN:
  • 9780552554343
DDC classification:
  • YL/F/STE
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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 YL/STE Checked out Mythical Maze - Reading Challenge 2014 17/05/2025 CY00003600
Kids Books Kids Books Colombo Children's Area YL/STE Checked out Mythical Maze - Reading Challenge 2014 31/05/2025 CY00003601
Kids Books Kids Books Colombo Children's Area YL/STE Checked out Age 5 - 7 Colour Code (Green) 16/05/2025 CY00011745
Kids Books Kids Books Brightwood International School, Horana Children's Area Fiction YL/STE Available

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Reading Challenge 2013 YB024527
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

When Addis Berner Bear arrives in the city, it's so big and confusing and so loud and fast that he forgets why he has come.

Gradually, Addis gets to know the city: some things make his fur bristle, and some make his heart leap, but he still cannot remember why he is there. Then something terrible happens . . . and something amazing! And they combine to reveal the very tuneful truth about Addis Berner Bear.

GBP 5.99

Reviews provided by Syndetics

Booklist Review

There's a poignancy to this story that will escape preschoolers, but slightly older children will be intrigued by this brown bear, who arrives in the city amid a snowstorm, his trumpet in hand. The city is so big and confusing, loud and fast, that Addis forgets why he has come there at all. Slowly, he begins to acclimate himself, finding shelter with a homeless woman. He sees much, both good and bad. Still, the reason for his visit eludes him. Then Addis is robbed of his trumpet. In his despair, his homeless friend leads him to a poster announcing that he,  the Greatest Trumpet-Playing Bear, is to head a concert that very night. Thanks to his friend, a trumpet is acquired, the concert begins, and Addis plays a two-page spread of music that incorporates all that he has seen. The delicate artwork fascinates, sometimes exacerbating, sometimes ameliorating the bleakest parts of the story. But there's happiness here as well in the vignettes and full-page art, as Bear plays to a laughing crowd.--Cooper, Ilene Copyright 2008 Booklist

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