The boy who cried fabulous

by Leslea Newman

Other authorsPeter Ferguson (Illustrator)
Paper Book, 2004

Status

Available

Call number

[E] New

Publication

Berkeley, Calif. : Tricycle Press, c2004.

Description

A young boy's fascination with everything he sees around him causes him to be late and upsets his parents, until they come to realize his special gift.

User reviews

LibraryThing member ccondra
Cute book about a boy who sees everything fabulous about the world. A great way to teach children adjectives.
LibraryThing member annikasmith
This is an example of a realistic fiction book. It is set in present day and it is a story about a boy who loves the word fabulous and spends all day celebrating things fabulous. The boy and his parents are realistic characters which could be real life people.
Art Media: gouache
Appropriate Age:
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Primary
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LibraryThing member pacifickle
Roger is so excited to see everything the world has to offer, he's always running late. He describes everything as "fabulous." When his tardiness and overuse of the world "fabulous" get him in trouble, he figures out different ways to say and express just who he is. Great retro/graphic style
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illustrations make the world really seem as beautiful as Roger sees it. Great for character education or to illustrate the use of a good thesaurus.
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LibraryThing member matthewbloome
I read this and laughed most of the time. My wife read it and couldn't help laughing. This boy was a little unusual and yet the book is great for adjective use. I can picture reading this just before a talk about overused words. Fabulous isn't exactly the most common overused word, but for this kid
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it was.
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LibraryThing member bfried10
I found this book to be really enjoyable for many reasons. The main idea of this story is that you should always try to find the best parts about everything and that you should be an individual. At the begging of the story, the boy’s parents didn’t know what to do with him because he would
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always be late to everything. It turns out, the boy was always late because the wonderful things he saw during his travels always distracted him. It appeared that the boy had to compliment everything he could see. This shows the reader that even though your destination may not be fabulous, you can certainly find something along the way. Near the end of the story the boy takes his parent out and shows them the world through his eyes. After seeing what their child sees, the parents praise him for be so different and loving everything.
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LibraryThing member Cheryl_in_CC_NV
plenty of 'tomboy' books now exist, but this is one of the few to appreciate 'sissy boys'
LibraryThing member ashleytylerjohn
Quite a lot of fun, with lovely buoyant artwork that resembled Cadmus (I suspect intentionally, as it's just a shade different from the artist's normal style). Happy to have a young protagonist who resembles young me, but I'm not sure what the message was: if you improve your vocabulary people will
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like you better?

(Note: 5 stars = amazing, wonderful, 4 = very good book, 3 = decent read, 2 = disappointing, 1 = awful, just awful. I'm fairly good at picking for myself so end up with a lot of 4s).
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Awards

Language

Physical description

26 cm

ISBN

9781582461014

Barcode

32345000014135

Other editions

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