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Book Reviews of Never Tease a Weasel

Never Tease a Weasel
Never Tease a Weasel
Author: Jean Conder Soule, George Booth (Illustrator)
ISBN-13: 9780375934209
ISBN-10: 0375934200
Publication Date: 3/27/2007
Pages: 40
Reading Level: Ages 4-8
Rating:
  • Currently 1.5/5 Stars.
 1

1.5 stars, based on 1 rating
Publisher: Random House
Book Type: Library Binding
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

2 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

reviewed Never Tease a Weasel on + 6 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
I bought this copy because I remembered the book so fondly from childhood. Although the words are the same, the pictures are far from what I remembered. The new version pictures are mean, strange and gross whereas the original version had sweet pictures that I remembered fondly. If you have never seen the original, well this may be a fine copy for you. But for those of us who remember the original, this is not even a shadow of that version.
annalovesbooks avatar reviewed Never Tease a Weasel on
ISBN 0819300950 - Book does not state where it was printed, or an age range. Pictorial hardcover, 40 pages. Published by Parents' Magazine Press in 1964. By Jean Conder Soule, illustrated by Denman Hampson.

A lively rhyme that suggests a lot of ways that you could interact with a variety of animals, as long as you never tease a weasel.

My copy of this book is older than I am, because I stole it from my older brother. There is no storyline here, and there isn't supposed to be. This is a poem; it is exactly what you'd expect to get if Dr. Suess, Shel Silverstein and Laura Numeroff were melded into one awesome being. There's no threat, either, which a 2011 person might expect - there is no "this is what happens if you DO tease a weasel." Instead, the reason you shouldn't tease a weasel is simple - he won't like it and it isn't nice. It is, in fact, a ridiculously simple reason, or an elegantly simple reason, depending on how you look at it, but the important part is that it can have an actual influence on young readers. Learning this lesson in good behavior in a delightfully fun way will stick with a child - just ask the dozens of adults who've searched high and low to get their hands on a copy of a book they remember from their own childhoods.

Denman Hampson's illustrations are fantastic. They are fun and funny, they suit the text perfectly and never overwhelm it. The images have a fair amount of that crosshatch style of shading that was far more common pre-1980s and plenty of hilarious details that will catch, and hold, the attention of readers of any age.

- AnnaLovesBooks