Illustrated by Jose Aruego and Ariane Dewey.
Available at: www.delsolbooks.com and 1-888-335-7651.
Listen to outstanding readings by four-year-old Vienna Rose. A marvelous example of the magical encounter between a child and books that we wish for all children.
Book Description
Jaguar, the sharp-toothed, beady-eyed bully, is determined to
eat Rosa Raposa for dinner. But Jaguar had better watch out, because clever Rosa
has some surprises in store for him! In three hilarious South American trickster
episodes, Rosa uses her sharp imagination to make Jaguar look like the biggest
fool in the forest.
F. Isabel Campoy and bestselling illustrators Jose Aruego and Ariane Dewey have
created a story that will keep readers wondering how Rosa Raposa will get the
last laugh this time.
Reviews
Publishers Weekly : Campoy relays a trio of rather flat
trickster tales set in the Amazon rain forest, where the title character, crafty
Fox, thrice gets the best of beady-eyed, sharp-toothed Jaguar. Two tales follow
a predictable path: in the first, after Jaguar brags that he has tricked a
monkey into freeing him from the boulder-covered hole in which he was trapped,
Rosa convinces him to demonstrate how he escaped (she then rolls the boulder
over the hole again to ensure he stays there); in the second, sly Rosa asks
Jaguar to tie her to a tree so she will not be carried away by a fictitious
approaching cyclone, prompting Jaguar to demand that she tie him securely to the
tree first (after which she happily abandons him). In the third, more convoluted
tale, a parched Rosa uses honey from a beehive to fashion a disguise of leaves
so that she can slip past Jaguar to quench her thirst at the river. Throughout,
both the characters and the plot fall short of clever, making for a rather
ho-hum read. Artist duo Aruego and Dewey (Antarctic Antics) contribute vividly
hued art-Jaguar sports a bright blue coat with butter-colored spots and
half-moons, Rosa's fur is a zigzag fusion of orange and pink-rendered in pen and
ink, gouache, watercolor and pastel. The animals' changeable facial expressions
add a welcome dose of humor to these capers. Ages 3-7.
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.
School Library Journal : Kindergarten-Grade 3-Campoy sets three Spanish
trickster tales in the Amazon Rainforest, where a little fox uses her wits to
extricate herself from Jaguar's bullying threats. In "A Cry for Help," Chango-monkey
helps Jaguar when he is trapped in a hole, only to be threatened by the hungry
animal when he is free again. Rosa goads Jaguar into showing them once more how
he was snared, and then leaves him there. In "A Strong North Wind," Rosa is
caught by Jaguar, pretends there is a hurricane, and convinces her adversary to
be tied to a tree so he won't blow away. In "The Green Dress," Rosa outwits not
only Jaguar, but angry bees as well, and calls to Jaguar from one side of a wide
river, "I hope I don't see you again." "Oh, you will, Rosa Raposa, you will,"
responds her nemesis on the other side, slinking away, raising readers' hopes
that more stories are on the way. The pen-and-ink, gouache, watercolor, and
pastel illustrations are wonderful, bright, and saucy. This is a delightful book
for read-alouds, reinforcing the idea that brains are better than brawn.
Judith Constantinides, formerly at East Baton Rouge Parish Main Library, LA
Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
Booklist : K-Gr. 3. Campoy adapts three trickster tales from Spanish
stories about a fox that bests a wolf and resets them in the Brazilian Rain
Forest, changing the wolf to a jaguar. In each of these short stories, fox Rosa
Raposa evades hungry Jaguar. First she convinces him to leap into a pit, then to
tie himself to a tree, and finally she camouflages herself with leaves. Aruego
and Dewey's signature pen-and-ink, gouache, and watercolor illustrations play up
the trickery's humor and cheerfulness with expressive characters and bright,
tropical colors--Jaguar is blue spotted with white and Rosa is vibrant orange
and pink. An author's note offers some background and word definitions [ …] the
combination of Rosa's wily thinking; the well-paced text, with a rhyme at the
end of each chapter; and the sprightly pictures will make for lively read-alouds.
Julie Cummins Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved