A young boy is depicted doing a variety of naughty things for which he is repeatedly admonished, but finally he gets a hug. 'No, David!' is David Shannon's illustrated book of all the naughty things he used to get told off for as a child. Follow David as he jumps on his bed, walks mud through the house and breaks plant pots. It seems that everything young David does is met with a 'No!' from his mother, but in spite of her criticism, he knows she loves him. ?Alguna vez quiso hacer algo y se lo prohibieron terminantemente? ?Acaso no sigui? deseando hacer aquello?... tal vez hasta lo hizo a escondidas, o cuando los adultos no estaban en casa. Bueno, si ese es su caso, este libro le interesar?: cuando el premiado autor e ilustrador de este libro ten?a cinco a?os, escribi? su primer libro. En cada p?gina de aquel libro estaban escritas las palabras que dan nombre al texto actual... y una imagen de David haciendo algo que no deb?a hacer. El autor de esta obra ha crecido con los a?os, llegando a convertirse en adulto y profesional; sin embargo, algunas cosas nunca cambian. Si lo que se cuenta aqu? no es su caso.. Bueno, por lo menos el presente libro le ense?ar? todo aquello de lo cual usted se perdi?. When David Shannon was five years old, he wrote and illustrated his first book. On every page were these words: ...and a picture of David doing things he was not supposed to do. Now David is all grown up. But some things never change.... David Shannon grew up in Spokane, Washington. He has written and illustrated numerous popular books for children, including How Georgie Radbourn Saved Baseball, a New York Times Best Illustrated Book; The Amazing Christmas Extravaganza, an American Bookseller Pick of the Lists; and most recently, A Bad Case of Stripes, a selection of the Junior Library Guild. In 1996, he also illustrated Audrey Wood's The Bunyans, a School Library Journal Best Book of the Year and an ABC Children's Booksellers' Choice Award winner. David Shannon lives in Los Angeles with his wife, Heidi, and their dog, Fergus. When author and artist David Shannon was five years old, he wrote a semi-autobiographical story of a little kid who broke all his mother's rules. He chewed with his mouth open, jumped on the furniture, and he broke his mother's vase. As a result, all David ever heard his mother say was 'No, David!' Full color. |