Status
Available
Local notes
R Hau
Collection
Series
Genres
Publication
Random House Books for Young Readers (2000), Paperback, 48 pages
Description
Little Witch tries to be nice to her guest Cousin Bossy, but everything she does is wrong because witches are supposed to be bad and mean.
Language
Physical description
48 p.; 8.95 inches
User reviews
LibraryThing member AbigailAdams26
Little Witch returns in this fourth beginning-reader from Deborah Hautzig, once again finding that her sweet and helpful ways are a source of irritation for her impatient mother. When Cousin Bossy comes for a visit, all of Little Witch's considerate preparations are brushed aside by her know-it-all
Although Little Witch's Bad Dream continues to play with the theme of a little girl who is always running into trouble because she is too good, somehow the story isn't as strong as some of its predecessors. There's no clever twist at the end, as their was with Little Witch Goes to School, and no new friends to be made, as in Little Witch's Big Night. That said, the conclusion, in which Mother Witch continues to love her little girl despite her serious shortcomings, is quite appealing, and the artwork by Sylvie Wickstrom is cute and witchy. Recommended to fans of the Little Witch character, and to beginning readers looking for magical tales.
Show More
guest, who insists on rehanging the welcome sign and rearranging the flowers, and who objects to being told what kind of dreams to have. Fed up at last, Little Witch has a dream in which she is VERY bad, only to be informed by her mother that bad behavior in a dream just isn't going to cut it...Although Little Witch's Bad Dream continues to play with the theme of a little girl who is always running into trouble because she is too good, somehow the story isn't as strong as some of its predecessors. There's no clever twist at the end, as their was with Little Witch Goes to School, and no new friends to be made, as in Little Witch's Big Night. That said, the conclusion, in which Mother Witch continues to love her little girl despite her serious shortcomings, is quite appealing, and the artwork by Sylvie Wickstrom is cute and witchy. Recommended to fans of the Little Witch character, and to beginning readers looking for magical tales.
Show Less
Similar in this library
Pages
48