Susan Meddaugh was born and raised in Montclair, New Jersey. She graduated from Wheaton College, where she studied French literature and fine arts. After working briefly with an advertising agency in New York, she moved to Boston and worked at a publishing company for ten years, first as a designer, then art editor, and finally as art director. While there, she did the illustrations for Good Stones (Houghton Mifflin) by Anne Epstein, and then decided to strike out on her own as a freelance illustrator and creator of children's books. Since that time, Susan has written and illustrated many popular books for children, including Martha Speaks, which was chosen as a New York Times Best Illustrated Book for 1992. In 1998 she was awarded the New England Book Award, given by the New England Booksellers Association to recognize a body of work. Her work also was acknowledged with a New York Times Best Illustrated Award. She lives in Sherborn, Massachusetts. - from HMHBooks.com
Susan Meddaugh, a New England Book Award Winner, adores Halloween and calls it "THE major Holiday" in her household, in part, she says "because it's the only time in the year when you get to be someone else." - from Candlewick.com
The limerick is my favorite form of verse, it is short, yet can be hard to write as you need to make sure you have all the right words. There are 41 limericks in this book and while children are the target audience, the material is offbeat enough to also appeal to adults. All are silly, there is little in the way of serious substance. If you enjoy limericks in general or just silly verse in particular, this is a book that you will enjoy. It is simple, clean fun for all ages.
This is truly the worst book I have found at the library for children. I understand limericks are generally a insulting form but in the context of children these might be a little softer. Definitely don’t want my kids committing any of these to memory.
Several quite funny limericks, but many of them very mean, especially in the first section — I couldn't bring myself to read them out loud to my daughter.
This is an opportunity to get your kid hooked on one of the silliest art forms in the world! Limericks have an appealing rhythm and their simple meter and extremely tolerant rhyme scheme invite kids to play along. By about age six,(when some of the rhymes in the book may be losing their appeal) it's time to turn to your young listener and say :"There was a young woman named Annie..." and invite her to make up a rhyme.
Your reward could be a child with a lifetime addiction to silliness. You could, believe me, do a lot worse.
The way this book reads sounds like and reminds me of "Little Miss Muffet" because of how its rhymed and how you're supposed to pause when you read it. Children will like this book because it is very silly and it jokes about how parents act from the child's perspective. I think this is really important because adults often overlook how a child thinks and their reasoning for why they think things are happening to and around them. Another thing I liked about this book was that the chapters were organized into different themes.
This is a great book to read aloud to a classroom of children. It is easy to follow and will surely keep the attention of even young readers/listeners. Most children will be able to identify with the silly situations. The limericks will likely leads to conversations and could also be incorporated into language arts lessons when children can write their own limericks. This book would be a fun and engaging way to teach a new style of writing.
The fun book is a collection of limericks by John Ciardi. They are best for 1-5 grade. There are a total of 45 limericks that range in topics from friendship to animals to fantasy. This book has an overall theme of plain entertainment. It is fun and will keep you smiling.