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Bobot Rumpus!

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: UK Andersen Press 2014Description: 32pISBN:
  • 9781849396608
DDC classification:
  • YL/TAY
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Notes Date due Barcode Item holds
Kids Books Kids Books Colombo YL/TAY Available

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CY00006271
Kids Books Kids Books Matara Apex Children's Area Fiction YL/TAY Available Age Group 5 - 7 years (Green Tag) CY00006272
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

When Mum and Dad go out for the evening they think they've left their daughter in safe hands with robots designed to get her to bed! There's Cook-bot to make great spaghetti for dinner, Clean-bot to do the washing-up, Wash-bot for bath time and even Book-bot for a bedtime story. What could possibly go wrong? 'There isn't an illustrator in Britain who uses a more intelligent visual storytelling language.' TES

Reviews provided by Syndetics

Kirkus Book Review

Once more into the night, when feckless parents leave their kid in the charge of defective robots. Who are these parents anyway, and haven't they read by now--or just scanned in a picture book--that you can't trust robot babysitters? This old ground, so well-turned it has surrendered most of its nutrients, is visited again by Taylor with little new to offer except for Collins' robots, which are ancient, modern and futuristic all rolled into one (or seven--the number of droids invented here). So the parents gaily skip out for the evening and entrust their little girl to a gang of robots they haven't even unpacked. (Mum says, "They're the latest models. What could possibly go wrong?" Right.) In often-clunky couplets, readers are taken through the ensuing chaos, which culminates with the robots zonked out in the parents' bed, along with the parents. Serves them right. It's playful enough, but the narrative skips along and never dives in--as it does in Jon Scieszka and David Shannon's Robot Zot! (2009) or Timothy Bush's Benjamin McFadden and the Robot Babysitter (1998)--leaving these robots without much personality. Subpar. (Picture book. 4-9)]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

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