The Berenstain Bears Trick or Treat (First Time Books, #32)

by Stan Berenstain

Other authorsJan Berenstain (Author)
Paperback, 1989

Status

Available

Call number

J2M.0600.09

Publication

Random House

Pages

32

Description

The Berenstain Bear cubs have an adventure on Halloween night that proves Mother's adage, "Appearances can be deceiving."

Description

Come for a visit in Bear Country with this classic book from Stan and Jan Berenstain. It’s Halloween and Brother and Sister can’t wait to go trick-or-treating with all of their friends, but when someone in the group encourages the kids to play a trick, things don’t go as planned. All little cubs can celebrate Halloween and learn about how to be a good friend and neighbor—and the bonus stickers makes this book the perfect gift for Fall!

Collection

Barcode

4982

Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

1989

Physical description

32 p.; 8 inches

ISBN

0679800913 / 9780679800910

Lexile

L

User reviews

LibraryThing member jake.stover
The book The Berenstain Bears Trick or Treat is about the infamous bears getting ready for trick or treating. Brother Bear is dressed up as a monster and “scares” Mama Bear. She tells the children that looks can be deceiving. Later, when they go trick or treating, they go with some trouble
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making children and start to “trick” Miz McGrizz, who they think is a mean old witch. She brings them inside and gives them treats.

I like the message this book gives. The message of looks being deceiving is a great thing to teach children. I think the book was very good. It had some funny parts and some serious parts. It was very easy to read and it used wonderful descriptive words. It had a good story line and would easily be read by a child.

I would use this book around Halloween to teach children about Halloween safety. I would also use it to teach children about not judging others based on their appearances.
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LibraryThing member ajsampson
This is a fun fiction book. This is the story of the Berentain bears and halloween and going trick or treating. Brother bear and sister bear are excited for all the halloween events but they are rerally trying to avoid one house because of the old lady that lives there. Mama Bear trys to convince
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them not judge a book by its cover. I think that this would be a great lesson for any class.
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LibraryThing member sweetiegherkin
Brother and Sister Bear get to go trick-or-treating on their own for the first time. They know there's one place in the neighborhood they won't go for treats - the house of Miz McGrizz. They think she's a witch, even though Mama Bear warns the children that appearances can be deceiving.

The
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Berenstain Bears "First Time Books" were all among my favorites as a young child/early reader. I remember being too young to read and staying up at night under the covers with a flashlight just looking at the pictures and imagining the story. Once I could read, these were among the books I read over and over again. As an adult, some parts of the book make me laugh a little (i.e., the main characters are named Mama Bear, Papa Bear, Brother Bear, Sister Bear -- really? That was as imaginative as the authors could get?). The books also come across now as perhaps overly preachy and moralistic, although I think I learned as much (if not more) about manners and good behavior from the Berenstain Bears books than the adults in my life. This particular title is still relevant in today's world where bullying is a major issue in part because children aren't learning to look beyond appearances and finding out the "different" kids aren't as different as they think.
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LibraryThing member jnicklas
This book is great for boys and girls as it gets close to Halloween.
LibraryThing member Chelz517
This Berenstein book is another story that takes the reader on an adventure! This is a story that takes the reader through a the traditions of a Halloween holiday! Children finding awesome fun and scary costumes and families carving pumpkins making scary faces in them! This story some of the
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characters are scared of Halloween and how some aspects of the holiday can be a bit creepy and scary. Well the characters go through some adventure through the woods to find out things are not always as it seems! This is a great book that children can relate to! Such a fun book is jump into!
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LibraryThing member AbigailAdams26
Brother and Sister Bear are looking forward to Halloween in this entry in The Berenstain Bears picture-book series, excited to be allowed to go trick-or-treating without adult supervision for the first time. As the two plot their route, they plan to give old Miz McGrizz's gnarled, twisted old
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treehouse a wide berth, given the rumors that she is a witch. Although Mama Bear tells them that their elderly neighbor is nothing of the sort, the two must learn for themselves that appearances can be deceiving...

Like many American children, I grew up reading about the Berenstain Bears, an anthropomorphic ursine family living in a cozy treehouse in Bear Country, whose adventures always illustrated some moral point. The characters first appeared in the 1962 The Big Honey Hunt, edited by none other than Dr. Seuss, and included in the Random House Beginner Books collection. Since that time, hundred of other books have been produced, as well as a television show, video games, plays, and films. I don't think I read The Berenstain Bears Trick or Treat as a child, as it was published well after the period when I gravitated toward picture-books, but I have added it to my "sweet youth" shelf all the same. The story is engaging, and while it had an overt didactic aim, it didn't feel overly preachy to me. The story idea here - an elderly woman is mistaken for a witch by the children in her neighborhood - has also been explored in such children's books as Carol Carrick's Old Mother Witch, Sine Van Mole's Meena, and Ruth M. Arthur's A Cottage for Rosemary, amongst many others. The artwork in this one is colorful and cute, like all of the Berenstains' books, and captures the fun and frights of Halloween night.

In sum, an engaging, entertaining Halloween story for the picture-book set, one which addresses an important theme: namely, that we should not judge others based upon their appearance.
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Rating

½ (71 ratings; 3.8)

Call number

J2M.0600.09
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