爱心树

Front Cover
南海出版公司, 2007 - Juvenile Fiction - 60 pages
Zhei shi yi shu tian cai xi er fu si tan de chuan shi jing dian. Ben shu yu yan you mo, Wen xin, Yi jian dan po shi de cha tu, Qian xian de wen zi, Dan dan de ren sheng feng ci yu sheng huo zhe xue, Miao hui yi ge you yi ke you qiu bi ying de ping guo shu he yi ge tan qiu bu yan de hai zi, Gong tong zu cheng de wen xin, You lüe dai ai shang de dong ren gu shi, Shi yi ze you guan"suo qu"yu"fu chu"de yu yan.

About the author (2007)

The most popular current writer of humorous verse for children, Shel Silverstein was born in Chicago, Illinois, has been married and divorced, has one daughter, and currently lives in Brooklyn, New York. His career includes composing popular songs, drawing cartoons, writing many adult articles (several for Playboy), and acting. However, he is best known for his self-illustrated children's poetry. His first such book was Uncle Shelby's Story of Lafcadio, the Lion Who Shot Back (1963), the humorous tale of a lion who turns the tables on hunters. It was followed by The Giving Tree (1964), a story of a parentlike tree that gives endlessly and is endlessly used by its son. Several other such picture books followed, including The Missing Piece (1976), about a circle that goes in search of a missing piece, and its sequel, The Missing Piece Meets the Big O (1981). However, two collections of poetry are probably his best-loved work: Where the Sidewalk Ends: The Poems and Drawings of Shel Silverstein (1974), and A Light in the Attic (1981). All of Silverstein's poetry for children employs the language play common to Lewis Carroll and Edward Lear. Silverstein is probably the best of the contemporary nonsense poets for children.

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