Wheelers Books
Show navigation
Hide navigation
Children & Young Adults
General Audience & Adults
By Publication Date
By Age Group
Find books by...
freight

Nonstop Nonsense

Nonstop Nonsense
 

An anthology of rhyming nonsense and fantastical tales for young children.

Sorry, title is now out of print.

Quick Reference

ISBN 9780749702786
Published 1 October 1998 by Misc - Random House New Zealan
Format Paperback, New edition
Author(s) By Mahy, Margaret
Illustrated by Blake, Quentin

... view full title details below.

Full details for this title

ISBN-13 9780749702786
ISBN-10 0749702788
Stock Out of stock
Status Out of print
Publisher Misc - Random House New Zealan
Imprint Mammoth
Publication Date 1 October 1998
International Publication Date 5 July 1990
Publication Country United Kingdom United Kingdom
Format Paperback, New edition
Edition New edition
Author(s) By Mahy, Margaret
Illustrated by Blake, Quentin
Category English Literature: Collections & Anthologies Of Various Literary Forms
Interest Age 4-12 years
Reading Age 4-12 years
Library of Congress New Zealand literature
NBS Text Children's Fiction
ONIX Text Children/juvenile
Number of Pages 128
Dimensions Width: 111mm
Height: 178mm
Weight 99g
Dewey Code 828.91409
Catalogue Code Not specified

Description of this Book

An anthology of rhyming nonsense and fantastical tales for young children.

^ top

Awards & Reviews

US Review Another of the splendid New Zealander's more light-hearted books (now published here for the first time, although its original date was 1977) comprises 10 wildly zany stories and 17 nifty comic poems (yes, poems - there are passages of unexpected loveliness in this light verse). Mahy has an endlessly inventive imagination. In The Insect Kingdom That Didn't Get Started, a fly and a spider talk hopefully about changing the world if they ever get out of the vacuum cleaner where they're trapped; but once they've escaped, the spider spins a new web, and the fly flies right off to perform his usual mischief. Never didactic, Mahy wryly observes: Aren't we lucky. . .that we would have more sense than that. There's often an unexpected twist in her stories, and an underlying seriousness that adds pungency to her wit - as in the story about a crowd that sets out to throw bricks at a harmless monster, with fortunately harmless results but no understanding on either side. As for language - Mahy makes it prance and turn and swoop like the lively characters Blake brings airily to life in his inimitable style (he even makes good fun of the title page's verso). A treasure trove for storytellers, teachers, parents, or browsers. (Kirkus Reviews)

^ top

Author's Bio

There is no author biography for this title.

^ top