Edwina, the Dinosaur Who Didn't Know She Was Extinct

by Mo Willems (Author) Mo Willems (Illustrator)

Edwina, the Dinosaur Who Didn't Know She Was Extinct
Reading Level: K − 1st Grade
Two-time Caldecott Honor winner and New York Times bestselling author Willems introduces a lovable new character--a dinosaur who plays with kids and bakes cookies. Reginald Von Hoobie-Doobie is determined to prove dinosaurs are extinct, but what will happen to Edwina if anyone believes him?
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Publishers Weekly

Matronly Edwina, a lichen-green T. Rex wearing a beribboned straw bonnet and toting a lavender handbag on her claw, loves doing community service. Crayony sketches show her fixing a street lamp (no ladder necessary) and letting kids slide down her back. "Everybody loved Edwina... except Reginald Von Hoobie-Doobie." Reginald, a precocious boy with malicious tilted eyebrows, passionately delivers a report on " 'Things That Are Extinct.' Specifically, dinosaurs." His classmates, whose doodles of Edwina hang on the bulletin board, swiftly contradict him and run outside to have some of the dino's homemade cookies. Yet Reginald doesn't give up (and another book might present such stubbornness as admirable). His desperate efforts to be heard finally attract Edwina's maternal solicitude, and in a bombastic pantomime sequence, he presents her with "the truth about dinosaurs." Afterward, "Reginald felt fantastic! No one had ever listened to him so well for so long," and Edwina "knew she was extinct." Even better, disillusionment doesn't change Edwina. "She just didn't care. And, by then... neither did Reginald Von Hoobie-Doobie." The fellow has finally found a friend. In the closing image, Edwina bakes cookies for her new pal. Like Willems's "Leonardo the Terrible Monster", this is a tale about craving attention, but the reassuring tone and expert pacing will win over readers. More important, the book comments on polite debate and helps raise useful questions. Is there such a thing as too much knowledge? Can popular notions be challenged? Should we listen to others, even when we don't agree? For Edwina, ignorance is bliss, but awareness is good, too. Ages 4-7. "(Sept.) " Copyright 2006 Publishers Weekly Used with permission.

School Library Journal

K-Gr 2 -Edwina the dinosaur is known and loved throughout the town for her many acts of kindness and her excellent chocolate-chip cookies. The literal-minded class know-it-all, Reginald Von Hoobie-Doobie, sets out to prove to everyone that dinosaurs are extinct. No one pays the slightest attention to him; ironically, only Edwina is convinced (not that she cares). In the end, as Reginald sits enjoying her cookies, he finds that he doesn -t care either. Willems -s expressive cartoon style makes the most of his fabled ability with line. Readers will enjoy Edwina in her straw hat, handbag, delicately painted claws, beribboned hat and simple strand of pearls, and especially her expression of utter shock when she realizes she is extinct. Aesthetically, this is neither as elegantly designed as Willems -s -Pigeon - books (Hyperion) nor as bold a departure as his "Knuffle Bunny" (Hyperion, 2004), but it will nonetheless please the author -s many fans. The added pleasure of finding Knuffle Bunny and Pigeon in the illustrations is an unexpected bonus." -Kate McClelland, Perrot Memorial Library, Old Greenwich, CT" Copyright 2006 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
Classification
Fiction
ISBN-13
9780786837489
Lexile Measure
560
Guided Reading Level
10
Publisher
Hyperion Books for Children
Publication date
September 20, 2006
Series
-
BISAC categories
JUV019000 - Juvenile Fiction | Humorous Stories
JUV002060 - Juvenile Fiction | Animals | Dinosaurs & Prehistoric Creatures
Library of Congress categories
Dinosaurs
Identity
Identity (Psychology)
Pennsylvania Young Reader's Choice Award
Nominee 2008 - 2008
Buckaroo Book Award
Nominee 2007 - 2008

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