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Richard Scarry's Cars and Trucks from A to Z (A Chunky Book(R)) :: 0679806636
Description
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| Illustrated in full color. This car-and- truck-filled alphabet extravaganza that starts with an ambulance and ends with a zippercar, is shaped like Lowly Worm's applemobile. Editorial Descriptions are usually submitted by the manufacturers, publishers and authors. Contact us if you are one of them, and wish to change the above description. |
Reviews
Customer feedback
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Author: Guest My son loves the cars and trucks, the illustrations are cute and imaginative. We have fun pointing out the letters and talking about sounds. I didn't realize the book would be so small, but it's nice for travel.
Thanks,
Lyndsey Jones
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Author: Guest My son is 1 and I just purchased this book for him. He loves looking at all of the cars and trucks and turning the pages. It is also a small book, so it is easy to take in the diaper bag. When we are away from home and he gets fussy, I give him the book to look at and he settles down right away.
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Author: Guest My son (almost 2) loves this book. We keep it in the car for him, and he 'reads it by himself' and tells me about the different cars/trucks he sees while doing so (pumpkin truck, pickle car, upside-down car, etc). And of course, the Richard Scarry characters are absolutely adorable, who couldn't love them?
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Author: Guest I love Richard Scarry's books. Great illustrations. I bought this book based on the reviews. I was disappointed in the size of the book, not the length, but the size of it. My sons struggle to see all of the cars because the pictures are so tiny. The lemon car is the size of a pea! The entire book fits in my palm. Great for diaper bags, but not for everyday use in our house.
It won't keep me from getting other books by Richard Scarry.
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Author: Guest My older son loved it from 10-14 months. Then he stopped taking it out. We found out why when he was 18 months, he said, "no 'moncar" (i.e. no such thing as lemon car", and "no like". And now he won't let us read it to his younger brother. He prefers the "better silly books" that actually uses imagination than slapping words together to make a book.
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