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Title
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en_US
Read and Understand, Folktales & Fables, Stories & Activities, Grades 2-3
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Description
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en_US
Author: Jo Ellen Moore
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Creator
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en_US
Evans, Marilyn
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Contributor
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en_US
Robinson, Don
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Date
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2016-01-25T19:28:30Z
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en_US
2004-07
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en_US
2000
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Date Available
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2016-01-25T19:28:30Z
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Date Issued
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en_US
2000
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Abstract
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en_US
At least twelve of the twenty-one stories used here are recognizable fables, including GGE, BC, The Tortoise and the Eagle, GA, The Monkey and the Crocodile, CP, FS, The Rabbit That Ran Away, The Crow and the Peacock, BW, SW, The Tiger and the Big Wind. Following each story there are four or five skill pages covering things like comprehension, vocabulary, phonics, structural analysis, and parts of speech. Simple illustrations accompany the story text. The best of the illustrations is a view of monkey lying on crocodile's back in mid-river (52). In GGE, the farmer and his wife, after killing the goose, keep buying geese in the hopes of finding another gold-layer (11). The Tortoise and the Eagle (23), described as an African Fable, is new to me. Tortoise hosts eagle often, but eagle never invites tortoise. Tortoise hides himself in a gourd full of fruit which he gives to eagle. He declares himself in eagle's home. When eagle gets angry, tortoise demands to be taken home and seizes on eagle's leg. He holds on until eagle takes him home. The grasshopper in GA never goes to the ants' home; he comes to a realization on his own about saving from your abundance for later need (38). The Little People (102) is new to me. A young Native American boy meets some diminutive people who offer to trade with him for their diminutive bow and arrows. He refuses and later regrets that he judged on size. The Crow and the Peacock (108) is not the usual Aesopic fable. White crow paints yellow peacock the colors we now associate with the peacock. Peacock is so proud that he wants no competition from crow. He manages to knock over all the paints except black. SW (119) is unfortunately told in the poorer version. In the final tale, the rabbit talks the tiger into believing that a big wind is coming and into demanding that he, tiger, be tied up first for security against the wind (131).
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Identifier
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en_US
1557997500 (pbk. : cover)
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en_US
5007 (Access ID)
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Language
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en_US
eng
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Publisher
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en_US
Evan-Moor Corp.
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en_US
Monterey, CA
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Subject
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en_US
LB1573 .M66 2000
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en_US
Collection
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en_US
Title Page Scanned
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Type
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en_US
Book, Whole