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Dragons: A Pop-Up Book of Fantastic Adventures | 
enlarge | Author: Keith Moseley Creator: M.p. Robertson Publisher: Abrams Books for Young Readers
List Price: $15.95 Buy Used: $4.97 You Save: $10.98 (69%)
Rating: 17 reviews
Media: Hardcover Edition: Pop Reading Level: Ages 4-8 Pages: 12 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.9 Dimensions (in): 12.8 x 10.2 x 0.6
ISBN: 0810949008 EAN: 9780810949003 ASIN: 0810949008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: Ex-library book with related stickers and stampings. Heavy wear on corners, edges, and on spine. Pop-ups are beautiful! The book has clean text and a good binding. No pri or itymail or international. -2a-
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description Dragons are popular as never before and here they pop up in fire-breathing action!
Five dramatic dragon stories from around the world, including Beowulf and the Firedrake, St. George and the Dragon, and those from ancient China and Japan come to life, literally flying from the pages. Dynamic paper-engineering has these magnificent dragons snapping their jaws, casting fire, and flapping their massive wings. A book sure to be a hit with dragon-lovers of all ages.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 5 more reviews...
Fantastic Pop-Up May 24, 2008 Puff (Seattle, WA USA) This is yet another fantastic pop-up book. I collect pop-up books and I certainly was not disappointed with this one, DRAGONS: A Pop-Up Book of Fantastic Adventures.
Excellent Pop-Up Dragon book for young children April 22, 2008 Demeter Lyon (Bay Area, CA, USA) This book has beautiful illustrations (lovely color and details) with simple, but impressive, pop-up art. As another reviewer noted, complex pop-up stuff is easily destroyed by kids. My four year old likes to feel the fangs and make the dragons 'fly' by opening and closing the book. It has remained durable over the past several months, unlike other pop-ups. This is one of his all time favorite books. Although the retellings are rather dry, I like the fact that it includes dragon stories from a wide range of cultures: England, China, Sweden, Japan. With a (very little!) extra imagination, it is easy to fill the stories out. My husband uses fake British and horrid Scottish accents that make our son giggle. Discussion about how fables and rules work (Why did the Dragon Princess leave?) generate more discussion... and at bedtime, I appreciate being able to tell my kids they only get one or two dragon stories, if it's already late. Or, if it's the only story, even reading all 5 does not take that long. Because these are familiar legends, one can find other versions, and I think it's really good for kids to learn that there are different ways to tell the story of St. George and the Dragon. Or that in some versions of Maud and the Wyvern the knight who kills the Wyvern is named Garston, and in some versions he's a high born local Knight, and in other versions he's a prisoner who figured that the risk of fighting a wyvern would be worth the possibility of freedom. We parents can learn a lot with a little research! Some of the stories are a little boodthirsty, so it could be scary for young children, and when my son finally gets to take it to share at his preschool, I am planning to let the teachers know which stories are best for the littlest ones...
Dragons: A pop up book March 16, 2008 Marita Ruiz (Eugene, OR USA) This is a beautiful book. It is the second one I've purchased for a gift. I think if you are a person interested in dragon lore, then this is a great book to buy. The quality of the "pop ups" is amazing. The text interesting and informative.
Weak story-telling and just OK pop-ups February 7, 2008 James Huff (Los Angeles, CA United States) I bought this for my 4-year-old son because he loves pop-up books and is very interested in dragons. This book was a disappointment, though. There are only five pop-ups really, to go with five dragon stories, each told in a two-page spread. The stories, drawn from common legends around the world, are retold in a summary form that takes all the magic and drama out of them. The popups are also disappointing. Only one is reasonably sophisticated and well-done; the rest are rather simplistic. Most of the other pop-up books we have are much more creative and compelling in their storytelling, design, or both. [...]
Ho Hum from a pop-up collector... December 4, 2007 JJH-V (Washington State) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
The illustrations are quite lovely, and the little stories explaining each dragon are nicely written. I give it only three stars because there are so few pages, and the construction of the pop-up features are very unremarkable.
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