On the playground, Llama goes fast! Llama zips by on his scooter and swishes down the slide--whoosh! These board books are more than great read-alouds--they're great act-alongs, too! Younger audiences will love doing as Llama does in these supremely adorable, incredibly engaging new board books.
Anna Dewdney was an award-winning children's-book author, illustrator, teacher, mother, and enthusiastic proponent of literacy and reading aloud to children. She was the author of the bestselling Llama Llama Red Pajama series of picturebooks, among many others. She lived with her partner Reed Duncan in Vermont where she worked, gardened, and spent time with her daughters and dogs.
First, for the people who would say, "why are you counting this to your total for the year?" Simple, I've read this book at least 30 times this past year, which at 12 pages each time equals out to be 360 pages. Cormac McCarthy's apocalyptic epic Blood Meridian is 337 pages. I can count Blood Meridian, I can count Llama Llama Zippty-Zoom!
Second, this book is a blast to read. You can read it essentially singing it. You can read it to emphasize the sound effects. Or just read it straight. All of the Llama Llama books are absolute treasures in Children's literature.
This is another of the Llama Llama board books for very young readers. I was taken aback when I opened up the e-book because Llama's ears were waving in the breeze on the cover! The motion continues on the pages, with ears and tails wagging. I'm not sure I really like this e-book feature; it was kind of distracting for me.
The other problem is that this particular e-book is missing nearly 1/4 of the text. The rhyme is supposed to go:
Unfortunately, in my copy, the last line was cut (in the first two out of the three stanzas), so it read:
Llama Llama ZIP! Llama Llama ZOOM! Llama Llama Red Pajama
I thought maybe Dewdney had really dropped the ball with her writing! But it's just the stupid e-book conversion. (I still have no idea what the last line of the second stanza is. Something that rhymes with "swoosh", I'm guessing...)
The illustrations don't impress me, either. Again, I think it's something to do with the animated e-book format, but Llama and Nelly often have pure white eyes (creepy!) or they look half asleep. I'm guessing there's supposed to be some blinking or something going on there, but it's not working as planned.
I might've rated this higher had it just been a regular e-book (or board book), but since this is the version I read, this is the version I'm going to rate. I just wish those missing lines had been included. I'm guessing they rhyme, but... I really don't know!
My daughter loves Llama Llama, and this is arguably her most requested book in the series. It falls under the author’s more quick and simple sub-set of stories. It includes lot of actions and sounds, and playground pictures that make for a fun and relatable read-aloud book.
We've read many of the books in the Llama Llama series by Anna Dewdney and they are really fun books to read aloud.
Unfortunately our girls are growing out of books like this, so I have to sneak them in on my own when I get a chance. This is a short and cute book that encourages being active and zooming around.
There's lots of onomatopoeia and I'm sure that the littlest ones will want to hop and clap along with this book.
The narrative and illustrations are just as adorable and entertaining as I've come to expect with these books.
The one thing I don't understand is that they keep saying 'red pajama' and the little llama is not wearing red pajamas. I think it could be confusing for a wee little one.
I see a trend with this, especially now that I've also read Llama Llama Hoppity-Hop! I'm sure it's intentional, and the point is just to make a fun rhyme to read aloud and refer back to the original book in the series.
My daughter finds the book no matter where it is on her shelves. She loves pointing at the ball, at the car, trying to make the vroom noises from one of the pages... it's a favorite.
In this essential installment of the Llama Llama omnibus, red pajamas are given less literary and illustrative value. Rather, the emphasis is placed on the activities of a day on the playground. Onomatopoeia is used to incite energetic movements. Indeed, Llama Llama and his frequent companion, the anthropomorphized wildebeest Nelly Gnu, seem to dance across the page in a vivacious testament to the act of recreation. The work, in its lyricism, its vibrancy, and its decidedly anti-grandiloquence diction, is a spartan celebration of play.
A much shorter book than the original Llama Llama Red Pajama book, but still filled with lyrical rhymes:
Llama llama zip Llama llama zoom (turn page) Llama lama vroom vroom vroom (turn page)
Although it is short it is a great length to capture my infants attention and calm him down for a nap. He rhyming seems to calm him so sometimes I’ll read the book a few times in a row to get him to sleep.
Oh wow, how fun this is to read aloud, to almost sing! After a few readings, even toddlers will have some of the lines memorized, because the lines flow so perfectly. And there will be more than a few readings, I promise. And your little one may be inspired to go outside and play - always a good thing!
This is classic Anna Dewdney mini-sized. Written in her distinctive rhythmic style it is perfect for reading aloud. It has a subtle message about friendship slipped in but its basically just a short, fun read. If your child enjoys this than read more Anna Dewdney, of course!
It really bothered me that the book says “llama llama red pijamas” so many times. The llama is not on his pijamas. My little one loves everything “llama llama”, so we have covered a lot of the text with our own version.
My son's absolute favorite book at 7 months old! We read it many times a day, and he actually chooses this book to bring to me, which is adorable to see!
this fun childrens book is about llama playing with his friends racing around and swinging and in the end he ends up tired out and all sitting under the tree relaxing