336th out of 391 books
—
556 voters
The Witch's Christmas
A good witch helps Santa deliver his Christmas goodies after he is entangled with a spaceship.
Paperback, 32 pages
Published
October 1st 1986
by Scholastic
(first published 1986)
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I would probably give this book one and a half stars.
The funniest parts to the story, I thought, were in Norman Bridwell's simple but familiar illustrations, capturing some humorous and well considered ways that the witch's presence might be beneficial to the kids. I have had this book read to me for years now, but there is an old-fashioned sensibility about it that always remains.
The funniest parts to the story, I thought, were in Norman Bridwell's simple but familiar illustrations, capturing some humorous and well considered ways that the witch's presence might be beneficial to the kids. I have had this book read to me for years now, but there is an old-fashioned sensibility about it that always remains.
There was a nice witch next door to kids. She had black snow in the winter. She also had a black snowman who threw black snowballs. The witch waited for Santa Claus, but he didn't come. She jumped on her broom and found Santa. She cast a spell on her broom and made a lot of brooms to help Santa and his reindeer fly.
May 19, 2013
Paul Arora
marked it as to-read
Mar 03, 2013
Angela
marked it as to-read
Nov 27, 2012
Andrea Enriquez
marked it as to-read
Oct 10, 2012
Sarah
marked it as to-read
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Norman Bridwell is an American author and cartoonist, best-known for the Clifford the Big Red Dog series of children's books. Bridwell attended John Herron School of Art in Indianapolis, Indiana. He currently resides on Martha's Vineyard, MA, where he continues to write an average of two books a year.
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