Status
Available
Call number
Description
Join Jillian Jiggs for all the fun of a snowy day.
Series
Genres
Collection
Publication
Scholastic Canada (2005), 40 pages
User reviews
LibraryThing member ParadisePorch
The back cover of this book tells me that “Phoebe Gilman is one of Canada’s best-loved children’s book author/illustrator.” After reading Jillian Jiggs and the Great Big Snow, I can see why.
When I read a picture book, I speak out loud, as if I were reading to a child. To do that with this
“Jillian, Jillian, say it’s not true.
How do you lose all things that you do?”
By the time Jillian finishes her play outside, she is minus her scarf, hat, and both mittens and her friends and her sister have repeated this mantra several times.
The imagination in the snow play is wonderful – the children build Martians and monsters, and roads for Mars. And the issue of lost outerwear is very realistic – a perennial problem with children.
The illustrations, “created in gouche and coloured pencils”, are also excellent – bright and cheerful with just the right amount of detail. I stop and examine the pictures and point out to myself what I would to a child: a small cat in the house scenes, various implements and activities in the outdoor scenes.
I didn’t expect to like this book much, but I did and I highly recommend Jillian Jiggs and the Great Big Snow, especially to children who live in snowy climates! 4½ stars
Written and illustrated by: Phoebe Gilman
Published by: North Winds Press 2002
When I read a picture book, I speak out loud, as if I were reading to a child. To do that with this
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book is a real pleasure. In two-line rhymes, Gilman fairly bounces us through the story of Jillian, excited by the snow but not allowed out until she finds her hat. Her mom says:“Jillian, Jillian, say it’s not true.
How do you lose all things that you do?”
By the time Jillian finishes her play outside, she is minus her scarf, hat, and both mittens and her friends and her sister have repeated this mantra several times.
The imagination in the snow play is wonderful – the children build Martians and monsters, and roads for Mars. And the issue of lost outerwear is very realistic – a perennial problem with children.
The illustrations, “created in gouche and coloured pencils”, are also excellent – bright and cheerful with just the right amount of detail. I stop and examine the pictures and point out to myself what I would to a child: a small cat in the house scenes, various implements and activities in the outdoor scenes.
I didn’t expect to like this book much, but I did and I highly recommend Jillian Jiggs and the Great Big Snow, especially to children who live in snowy climates! 4½ stars
Written and illustrated by: Phoebe Gilman
Published by: North Winds Press 2002
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LibraryThing member MeditationesMartini
I can't evaluate this one fairly because they say to the monster "Monster, you're meatloaf!" and that's weird on its own but for me it just totally cracks my concentration and sends me back to Chris Christie on TV recently admitting that Donald Trump won't let him order his own food but forces him
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to have the meat loaf and then trying to somehow argue that that's not emasculating dehumanizing and I think I kind of hate calling anyone meatloaf and find this book where the big kids are mean to the monster and the little kid gets upset kind of dispiriting but I can't get off that Chris Christie thing, guys, that happened like last week, that is an ongoing story in the real world. Show Less
Language
Physical description
40 p.; 8.02 inches
ISBN
0439969751 / 9780439969758