I Dont Want to Be a Pea
Material type:
- 9780192780188
- YL/BON
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Notes | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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Colombo Children's Area | YL/BON | Checked out | 15/05/2025 | CY00003012 | ||||
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Colombo Children's Area | YL/BON |
Available
Order online |
Age 5 - 7 Colour Code (Green) | CY00002463 | ||||
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Brightwood International School, Horana Children's Area | Fiction | YL/BON |
Available
Order online |
Age 5 - 7 Colour Code (Green) | YB025983 | |||
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Brightwood International School, Horana Children's Area | Fiction | YL/BON |
Available
Order online |
Story Lab 2012 | YB020707 | |||
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Matara Apex Children's Area | Fiction | YL/BON | Available | Age Group 5 - 7 years (Green Tag) | CY00002465 |
Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:
Hugo is in no doubt as to what he and Bella should go as to the Hippo-Bird Fancy Dress Party. They will go as the princess and the pea and he will be the princess (of course!) leaving poor Bella to be the pea. Indignant, Bella refuses. She has a better suggestion - they will go as a mermaid on a rock and she will be the mermaid (of course!) leaving a huffy Hugo to be the rock. Hugo is not happy. But neither is Bella. They just can't decide on a costume and things reach a crisis when theyboth flounce off saying they don't want to go to the party at all. After time to consider, both Hugo and Bella calm down and (privately) both choose to dress as a pea as a gesture of making it all up to each other. So when they both arrive at the party as peas, Hugo and Bella announce proudly that they are "two peas in a pod, just as it should be" underlining the message of the book that friendship is all about give and take. With wonderfully absurd illustrations from new talent Simon Rickerty and a great read-aloud text, this is a made-for-sharing picture book.
Reviews provided by Syndetics
Publishers Weekly Review
Hugo Hippo and Bella Bird may be symbiotic simpaticos, but the strong-willed duo can't see eye to eye as the Hippo-Bird Fairy-Tale Fancy Dress Party approaches (they can't even agree on the name of the event). Bella doesn't want to be the pea in a joint Princess in the Pea costume, while Hugo has no interest in being the "gray and blobby" rock to Bella's mermaid. Unable to come to terms, the pals harrumph to their separate quarters until a change of heart leads to a solution-and proves that they really are two peas in a pod. Bonwill (Naughty Toes) peppers her gentle friendship story with bits of knowing humor ("But you are gray and blobby," Bella says of the rock costume. "I will ignore that comment," Hugo replies), giving the proceedings some energetic flair. Different fonts distinguish the two speakers' words, and Rickerty balances sweet and silly in his portraits, using simple shapes, forceful lines, and snazzy blocks of color to give the friends plenty of personality. Ages 2-6. Agent: Marietta Zacker, Nancy Gallt Literary Agency. Illustrator's agent: Hilary Delamere, the Agency. (Feb.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.Horn Book Review
Bickering besties Hugo Hippo and Bella Bird are attending the "Fairy-Tale Fancy Dress Party." But they can't agree on a joint costume (e.g., Bella won't be the pea while Hugo's the princess; Hugo won't be a pumpkin while Bella's Cinderella). The clever resolution provides a happy ending. The comical banter is just right, and Rickerty's digital art is equally funny. (c) Copyright 2012. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.Kirkus Book Review
In this sweet-but-sassy British import, Hugo the hippo and Bella the bird announce their intentions to attend the Hippo-Bird (or Bird-Hippo) Fairy-Tale Fancy Dress Party disguised as the Princess and the Pea. Bella doesn't want to be the pea to Hugo's princess, of course ("too green and small"), so she decides she'll be a mermaid and Hugo will be her rock. Hugo protests that rocks are "too gray and blobby"--despite obvious similarities between him and rocks that Bella isn't shy to point out. Not long after their bickering ends in a snippy standoff, both separately reconsiderand both end up dressing as peas for the ball. This charming story of compromise is mostly a dialogue rendered in two typefaces, a rounder, more hippo-ish style for Hugo's voice and a scrappier one for Bella's. The spare design, a fetching combination of inky black lines and blankets of saturated color, perfectly reflects the comical nature of the friends' opposing perspectives. Rickerty has fun with color--at one point Bella paints Hugo orange (to be Cinderella's pumpkin), and the next spread is a cheerful mess of orange hippo tracks and white Bella tracks. The copyright page shows a photograph of a bird and hippo together, a natural phenomenon no doubt inspiring Hugo's opening line "All hippos have birds, and Bella is mine." A satisfying story of hippo-bird, bird-hippo friendship. (Picture book. 3-6)]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.There are no comments on this title.