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Alphabet Adventures: Book Recommendations for Learning the Alphabet (page 3)

By Alida Allison
Parents' Choice Foundation

The Alphabet Keeper
Ages: 4 - 8 yrs.
By Mary Murphy
Knopf, $14.95 (Hardcover)

The alphabet keeper is dumpy, grumpy, and nasty enough to keep the letters locked in a cage. But the letters escape and fly around the room, each making its own sound.

The letters elude the keeper by inserting or removing themselves from the narrative. For example, when the keeper chases the letters into the park, the  “p” turns upside down and the park turns into a bark.  A little dog bursts through a narrative frame and chases the keeper until the “b” turns backward and it becomes dark; the keeper can't see. This series of humorous situations continues, culminating in an unexpected twist.

More an adventure story calling attention to the letters than an alphabet book per se, The Alphabet Keeper is a treat for children learning to read and for those who read with them.

There's a Monster in the AlphabetThere's a Monster in the Alphabet
Ages: 4 - 8 yrs.
By James Rumford
Houghton Mifflin, $16 (Hardcover)

This fanciful history of the early Greek alphabet is based on the Greek myth that Cadmus, founder of Thebes, was originally a Phoenician who brought the new writing system with him on his gods-driven search for a new homeland. In telling his story, Rumford utilizes a Greek style of art dramatically and effectively, often on black backgrounds. The Cadmus story is woven with letters showing how their shape was associated with animals and objects (house, ox, etc.). It is certain to captivate intelligent children.

Found Alphabet
Ages: 4 - 8 yrs.
By Ramon Shindler and Wojciech Graniczewski, Illustrated by Anita Andrzejewska and Andrzej Pilichowski-Ragno
Houghton Mifflin, $16.00 (Hardcover)

An ingenious and delightful book of poetry using the alphabet as a framework, Found Alphabet is a sophisticated but simple combination of whimsical verse and intriguing illustrations. Anita Andrzejewska and Andrzej Pilichowski-Ragno use everyday objects: scraps of wood and metal, the cans, keys, gears, string, leaves, and cubes of sugar, illustrate each letter of the alphabet. The poems themselves are clever; some readers may find them philosophical.

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