Product Details
The Best Place to Read

The Best Place to Read
By Debbie Bertram, Susan Bloom

This item is not available for purchase from this store.
Buy at Amazon


15 new or used available from CDN$ 9.09

Average customer review:
(3 )

Product Description

A young child tries to find the perfect place to curl up with his new book in this hilarious and heartwarming tale. Scampering from his bedroom to the den, from the kitchen to the backyard, the young protagonist must dodge his baby sister’s messes, race across a lawn full of spraying sprinklers, and more–all in his search for the best place to read! And where would that be? Mommy’s lap, of course!


From the Hardcover Library Binding edition.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #811760 in Books
  • Published on: 2003-01-28
  • Released on: 2003-01-28
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 32 pages

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly
Eager to read his new book, the narrator of Bertram and Bloom's frolicsome debut just can't find the right spot to read. "I love Grammy's soft, cozy chair./ But so does old Rover. I tell him, `Move over,'/ But he won't make room for me there." The bean bag chair springs a leak, the backyard sprinklers drench him, and a wayward spring in "a lumpy and bumpy old chair" shoots him up "so high in the air." Finally he finds "the best place to be, just my book, Mom, and me"-his mother's lap. Except for a handful of awkward verses, the bouncy rhymes accentuate the slapstick and capture the boy's eagerness, frustration and (at last) cozy bliss. Garland (The Mouse Before Christmas) follows the text's light-hearted lead with computer-generated illustrations that recall Toy Story in the sculpted-clay look of figures and objects. The narrator's melon-size head sits atop a diminutive body, and his geometric world sports perfectly round bushes, with vibrant backgrounds featuring strong patterns. But the stylized approach diminishes the tender conclusion: in his mother's lap the boy appears stiff and his expression seems almost vacant. Aside from the chilly visual wrap-up, however, the story should elicit some giggles. Ages 3-6.
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From School Library Journal
PreSchool-Grade 2-A young boy describes his dilemma: he has a new book, but can't seem to find a comfortable and quiet place to read it. Like Goldilocks, he finds various seats too small, too chilly, too wobbly, or already occupied. The singsong verses describe how he rejects one spot after another as a spring in the old armchair comes loose under him, a lawn sprinkler turns on next to him, and his brother's beanbag chair explodes beneath him. The lighthearted artwork has the flat look of computer graphics, and some of the images seem slightly out of focus. Despite a satisfactory ending (the boy and his mother read together in a cozy chair), the overall effect is wearing, as the slight, single-minded plot barely manages to sustain interest. Still, young readers will enjoy exploring the colorful details that fill this child's world. A mixed effort that's mildly appealing.
Kathie Meizner, Montgomery County Public Libraries, Chevy Chase, MD
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist
PreS-Gr. 1. Anyone who, like Goldilocks, has ever had trouble finding a spot that's "just right" will sympathize with the young protagonist of this lively rhyming story. All the boy wants to do is sit down and read his new book, but his old chair is too small, the dog's hogging Grammy's chair, Daddy's chair is underneath a cold-blasting ceiling fan, and Auntie's rocking chair makes him seasick. Where will he go to read? "The backyard is great-- / I can read on the grass. / I'll sit on a patio chair. / It's the sprinklers--OH, NO!--splashing me head to toe, / So now it's too wet to read there." In the end he finds the best place to read of all--Mom's lap. Reminiscent of Daniel Kirk's work, the crisp, comical illustrations, featuring a redheaded boy and his unread book Silly Bird, are a winning match for this tightly rhymed saga of seeking and finding. Karin Snelson
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved