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Wemberly Worried

Amazon.com Price:  $4.27 (as of 30/04/2019 23:12 PST- Details)

Description

A back-to-school favorite

Wemberly worried about spilling her juice, about shrinking in the bathtub, even about snakes in the radiator. She worried morning, noon, and night. “Worry, worry, worry,” her family said. “Too much worry.” And Wemberly worried about one thing most of all: her first day of school. But when she meets a fellow worrywart in her class, Wemberly realizes that school is too much fun to waste time worrying!

Wemberly the mouse worries about everything: big things, like whether her parents might disappear in the midst of the night; little things, like whether she’ll spill grape juice on her toy rabbit, Petal; and things in between, like whether she might shrink in the bathtub. What she is more worried about than anything else, on the other hand, is her first day at the New Morning Nursery School: “What if no one else has spots? What if no one else wears stripes? What if no one else brings a doll? What if the teacher is mean? What if the room smells bad?” Happily, Miss Peachum introduces her to a kindred spirit very quickly. Jewel doesn’t have spots, but she is wearing stripes and holding a doll. As Wemberly plays with her new friend, she still worries, but no more than usual. (“And once in a while even less.”)

Kevin Henkes, well-loved author of the award-winning Lilly’s Purple Plastic Purse, gets to the heart of a child’s feelings like no one else can. Young worrywarts (and their parents) will see themselves in Wemberly, and be relieved that she, too, worries about playground equipment (“Too rusty. Too loose. Too high.”), sure-to-be-inhabited cracks in the wall, whether she would be the only butterfly in the Halloween parade, and, of course, whether school will be dreadful in every way. Henkes’s Lilly-style illustrations are sweet, expressive, and loaded with funny, inventive details that invite close perusal with every reading. (Wemberly’s roller-blading grandma, for example, is wearing a T-shirt that says “Waft.”) We are not worried about whether this book will develop into a classic–it’s going to! (Ages 4 to 8) –Karin Snelson


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