内容简介
Life is good for Oscar Westerwit. He's the mayor of Central Park -- the greatest place on earth for the squirrels, chipmunks, mice, and other animals who live there. He's the shortstop and manager of his baseball team. What could be bad? Plenty Big Daddy Duds, jewel thief, all-around thug, and leader of rats, is about to take over the park. And when he does, the other animals who live there will be turned out of their homes. Everyone looks to Oscar to save the day, but he may not even be able to save himself. . . .
作者简介
Avi is the author of more than sixty books, including Crispin: The Cross of Lead, a Newbery Medal winner, and Crispin: At the Edge of the World. His other acclaimed titles include The True Confessions of Charlotte Doyle and Nothing But the Truth, both Newbery Honor Books, and most recently The Seer of Shadows. He lives with his family in Colorado.
精彩书评
The Washington Post This New York is brash, energetic and wittily translated to fit Avi's anthropomorphic world, while Brian Floca's full-page illustrations skillfully render both the characters and their park. In his elegantly detailed pencil drawings, a battalion of rats, armed and at attention, fills Bethesda Fountain Terrace (the angel of the fountain, of course, is here a squirrel); in another, the nattily attired Oscar hatches a plot in the dim bar of the Rock and Mole Café. — Andrea Thompson Publishers Weekly In a starred review, PW called this tale of a baseball-loving jewel thief of a rat who takes over Central Park in 1900 New York City, "an over-the-top romp." Ages 8-12. (Mar.) Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information. Fewer Reviews Children's Literature When Big Daddy Duds moves his gang of rats from downtown Manhattan to Central Park, it is bad news for the residents. Oscar Westerwit, baseball fanatic and Mayor of Central Park as voted by its residents, decides to fight back with an army but soon realizes they are no match for these thugs. This early twentieth-century melodrama would not be complete without a damsel, but this one is anything but helpless. When Big Daddy's daughter, Maud, is jilted by her beau, Arty Bigalow, she leaves her parents' home. Maud, a nurse, gets a job working for a rich old goat in Central Park. When she hears what her father has done, Maud offers to help Oscar. She suggests a baseball game to determine who controls Central Park. Oscar's star pitcher, Arty Bigalow, is nowhere to be found on the big day. Much to the surprise of everyone, Maud becomes an integral part of the game. An amusing story with a teasing of baseball and a wide range of well-developed characters. When Avi's gangster talk is right on, it adds real color to the story. There are, however, some moments where it feels jarring and contemporary. Full-page pen and ink drawings are scattered throughout the book and will be appreciated by readers who have recently moved into chapter books. 2003, HarperCollins, Ages 8 to 10. —Sharon Salluzzo School Library Journal Gr 3-6-This animal fantasy cum comic-gangster tale is spiced with some old-fashioned romance and set at the turn of the 19th century. The narrator, a cub reporter at the Daily Mirror, tells the story of squirrel Oscar Westerwit, acclaimed as the "Mayor" of Central Park. The story centers around Oscar's struggle against the rat Big Daddy Duds, when he and his gang invade the park, terrorize the residents, and vandalize their homes. The book opens with the star pitcher of the Central Park Green Sox going missing: the first sign that something is amiss. The resolution to the conflict comes through a baseball game, and the character who replaces the missing player provides a pleasurable plot twist. The lighthearted, almost frothy characterization and conversational storytelling style work fine, and successfully evoke a tough New York, complete with payoffs and tip-offs. However, the fantasy is less successful. Some animals live in trees, albeit fully furnished, even electrified ones, leading readers to believe that they coexist with a human-sized world. On the other hand, wealthy Mr. van Blunker, a goat, lives in a mansion on Fifth Avenue. It turns out that there are no humans in this fantasy universe, but the magic is broken, and readers are left wondering about the relative sizes of the animals and their physical environment. The inclusion of nonnative animal species, including a yak and a kangaroo, may be a nod to cosmopolitanism, but it further weakens the fantasy. Still, this is an enjoyable chapter book for readers not yet ready for the seriousness or more sophisticated humor of Poppy (Orchard, 1995) and its sequels.-Sue Giffard, Ethical Culture Fieldston School, New York City Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information. Kirkus Reviews Central Park's furred and feathered residents face an incursion of gangster rats in this turn-of-the-20th-century tale of baseball, interspecies romance, and ingenuousness triumphant. The sudden appearance of Big Daddy Duds and his well-armed thugs compels Oscar Westerwit, a bon vivant squirrel who considers himself the park's unofficial "Mayor," to take action. His ragtag "army" is quickly dispersed, but unexpected allies have been at work behind the scenes, and persuade Oscar to play on Duds's predilection for baseball by challenging him to a winner-take-all game. With Oscar's new heartthrob Maud making a surprise appearance on the mound, the good guys come out on top, of course. Told in rollicking, streetwise language, the episode rolls fluidly along, and aside from one wounded rabbit the violence never escalates beyond threats-but there's more baseball talk than baseball action. Avi can do better than this predictable plot, and despite his habit of calling park residents "voters," and Floca's natty Wind in the Willows-type animal figures, any satiric or metaphorical subtext is buried beyond recovery. (Fiction. 10-12)
前言/序言
The Mayor of Central Park [平装] [8岁及以上] 下载 mobi epub pdf txt 电子书 格式
The Mayor of Central Park [平装] [8岁及以上] 下载 mobi pdf epub txt 电子书 格式 2024
评分
☆☆☆☆☆
难得的原版搞活动,可惜都是存货,比较多的灰,而且系列都不全了。
评分
☆☆☆☆☆
难得的原版搞活动,可惜都是存货,比较多的灰,而且系列都不全了。
评分
☆☆☆☆☆
评分
☆☆☆☆☆
难得的原版搞活动,可惜都是存货,比较多的灰,而且系列都不全了。
评分
☆☆☆☆☆
难得的原版搞活动,可惜都是存货,比较多的灰,而且系列都不全了。
评分
☆☆☆☆☆
难得的原版搞活动,可惜都是存货,比较多的灰,而且系列都不全了。
评分
☆☆☆☆☆
难得的原版搞活动,可惜都是存货,比较多的灰,而且系列都不全了。
评分
☆☆☆☆☆
难得的原版搞活动,可惜都是存货,比较多的灰,而且系列都不全了。
评分
☆☆☆☆☆
俗话说文无定法,写书评当然也无一定的格式,可以因人而异,因书而异。比如偏于谈感受的书评就可以直接从述感开头:“何建明的长篇报告文学《中国高考报告》是一部具有强烈震撼力的作品。不读则罢,越读越使人感到,高考的分量实在太重太重,它重得使许多中国人的腰背都压弯,连中华民族的脊梁也被压得出现了严重的畸型。高考啊!何时才能走出怪圈?”(《走出高考的怪圈》)想要带点文学色彩又要给读者一点悬念的也可以抒情开头:“若你走进普鲁斯特的世界,我想你不会不惊叹于那美妙的符号所产生的神奇魅力,不会不沉醉于玛德莱娜小点心的绵长回味,不会不震悸于人类内心的隐秘世界的强烈曝光。作为《追忆似水年华》的译者之一,我也不可能不更真切地感受到普鲁斯特开启的感觉世界对我的灵魂与感官的诱惑、冲击、洗涤、丰富、与净化。“(《全新而永恒的感觉世界》)当然书评的结尾也不一定都要推荐式的。可以表达某种愿望,如“愿借苇岸的亲切诚实的语言,生动盎然的诗意和宁静柔韧的美感铺就的小径,引领我们走向诗意栖居之地。”(《读<太阳升起以后>》)表达愿望之中有推荐作品的诚意。也可以批评某种现象或做法,如“他们认为如果儿童画能与范例完全相同,那么这种训练就是成功的。然而他们不明白,儿童有他们自己的世界,儿童有他们自己的艺术,他们与成人不一样!种种人为的限制对儿童艺术潜能都可能是一种扼杀。”(《生动有趣的图画书》)批评的目的仍然是为了推荐。