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Title: Author recognition


1
Author recognition
2
  • 1. "How good Meg is! Come, Amy,
  • let's do as they do. I'll help you
  • with the hard words, and they'll
  • explain things if we don't
  • understand," whispered Beth, very
  • much impressed by the pretty
  • books and her sisters example.
  • "I'm glad mine is blue," said Amy.
  • And then the rooms were very still
  • while the pages were softly turned,
  • and the winter sunshine crept in to
  • touch the bright heads and serious
  • faces with a Christmas greeting.

LITTLE WOMEN
Louisa May Alcott
3
PETER PAN
J.M. Barrie
  • 2. Mrs. Darling quivered and went to the window.
    It
  • was securely fastened. She looked out, and the
    night
  • was peppered with stars. They were crowding round
  • the house, as if curious to see what was to take
    place
  • there, but she did not notice this, nor that one
    or
  • two of the smaller ones winked at her. Yet a
  • nameless fear clutched at her heart and made her
    cry,
  • Oh, how I wish that I wasn't going to a party
  • tonight!
  • Even Michael, already half asleep, knew that she
  • was perturbed, and he asked, Can anything harm
    us,
  • mother, after the night-lights are lit?
  • Nothing, precious, she said they are the
    eyes a
  • mother leaves behind her to guard her children.
  • She went from bed to bed singing enchantments
  • over them, and little Michael flung his arms
    round
  • her. Mother, he cried, I'm glad of you.

4
JABBERWOCKY
Lewis Carroll
  • 3. Twas brillig, and the slithy tovesDid gyre
    and gimble in the wabeAll mimsy were the
    borogoves,And the mome raths outgrabe.Beware
    the Jabberwock, my sonThe jaws that bite, the
    claws that catch!Beware the Jubjub bird, and
    shunThe frumious Bandersnatch!

5
  • 4. Finally he settled himself to read the
  • final rule again. He had been trained,
  • since earliest childhood, never to lie. It
  • was an integral part of the learning of
  • precise speech. Once, when he had
  • been a Four, he had said, just prior to
  • the midday meal at school, I'm
  • starving.
  • Immediately he had been taken aside
  • for a brief private lesson in language
  • precision. He was not starving, it was
  • pointed out.
  • He was hungry.

Lois Lowry
THE GIVER
6
THE ROAD NOT TAKEN
Robert Frost
  • 5. I shall be telling this with a sigh
  • Somewhere ages and ages hence
  • Two roads diverged in a wood, and I
  • I took the one less traveled by,
  • And that has made all the difference.

7
Roald Dahl
  • 6. You may rrree-moof your vigs!
  • snarled The Grand High Witch. She had
  • a peculiar way of speaking. There was
  • some sort of a foreign accent there,
  • something harsh and guttural, and she
  • seemed to have trouble pronouncing
  • the letter w. As well as that, she did
  • something funny with the letter r. She
  • would roll it round and round her
  • mouth like a piece of hot pork-crackling
  • before spitting it out.

8
TALES OF A FOURTH GRADE NOTHING
  • 7. Im going to count to three,
  • my mother told Fudge. And then
  • I want you to tell me which shoes
  • you want.
  • Ready? One two three . . .
  • Fudge sat up. Like Pee-tah's! he
  • said.
  • I smiled. I guess the kid really
  • looks up to me. He even wants to
  • wear the same kind of shoes. But
  • everybody knows you can't buy
  • loafers for such a little guy.

Judy Blume
9
  • At school, Mrs. Dickens liked
  • Paul's picture of the sailboat better
  • than my picture of the invisible castle.
  • At singing time she said I sang too
  • loud. At counting time, she said I left
  • out 16. Who needs 16? I could tell it
  • was going to be a terrible, horrible, no
  • good, very bad day.

ALEXANDER THE TERRIBLE, HORRIBLE, NO GOOD,
VERY BAD DAY
Judith Viorst
10
PIGGIES
Audrey Wood
  • 9. Sometimes they're hot little
  • piggies, and sometimes they're
  • cold little piggies. Sometimes
  • they're clean little piggies, and
  • sometimes they're dirty little
  • piggies.
  • Sometimes they're good little
  • piggies, but not at bedtime. That's
  • when they skip down my tummy,
  • dance on my toes, then run and
  • hide.

11
THE TEACHER FROM THE BLACK LAGOON
  • 10. Freddy Jones throws a
  • spitball. She curls her lip and
  • breathes fire at him. Freddy's
  • gone. There is just a little pile
  • of ashes on his desk.
  • Talk about bad breath,
  • giggles Eric Porter. She slithers
  • over, unscrews his head, and
  • puts it on the globe stand.

Mike Thaler
12
RUNNY BABBIT
Shel Silverstein
  • 11. Runny Babbit mot all guddy
  • Makin puddy mies,
  • His wamma mashed him with
  • the clothes
  • And hung him out to dry.
  • Toe Jurtle said, What are
  • you doin
  • So high agrove the bound?
  • Runny Babbit sinned and
  • graid,
  • Oh, I'm just rangin hound.

13
THE STINKY CHEESE MAN AND OTHER FAIRLY STUPID
TALES
Jon Scieszka
  • 12. Once upon a time there was a
  • little old woman and a little old
  • man who lived together in a little
  • old house. They were lonely. So
  • the little old lady decided to make
  • a man out of stinky cheese. She
  • gave him a piece of bacon for a
  • mouth and two olives for eyes
  • and put him in the oven to cook.

14
POSSUM COME A KNOCKIN AT MY DOOR
  • 13. A possum was a-
  • scooting and a-
  • scramblin and a-danglin.
  • That possum that was
  • knockin made a fool
  • out of me!

Nancy Van Laan
15
JUMANJI
  • 14. Oh no, he moaned.
  • Volcano erupts, go back three
  • spaces.
  • The room became warm and
  • started to shake a little. Molten
  • lava poured from the fireplace
  • opening. It hit the water on the
  • floor and the room filled with
  • steam. Judy rolled the dice and
  • moved ahead.

Chris Van Allsburg
16
OUTSIDE OVER THERE
Maurice Sendak
  • 15. Poor Ida, never knowing,
  • hugged the changeling and she
  • murmured How I love you.
  • The ice thing only dripped and
  • stared, and Ida mad knew goblins
  • had been there. They stole my
  • sister away! she cried, To be a
  • nasty goblin's bride!
  • Now Ida in a hurry snatched
  • her Mama's yellow rain cloak,
  • tucked her horn safe in a pocket,
  • and made a serious mistake.

17
ONE FISH, TWO FISH, RED FISH, BLUE FISH
  • 16. The moon was out and
  • we saw some sheep. We
  • saw some sheep take a walk
  • in their sleep. By the light of
  • the moon, by the light of a
  • star, they walked all night
  • from near to far. I would
  • never walk. I would take a
  • car.

Dr. Seuss
18
NO, DAVID!
David Shannon
  • 17. That's enough, David!
  • Go to your room! Settle
  • down! Stop that this
  • instant! Put your toys
  • away! Not in the house,
  • David! I said no, David!
  • Davey, come here. Yes,
  • David, I love you.

19
  • 18. Her sister-in-law, Mrs.
  • Rebeccah Puddle-duck, was
  • perfectly willing to leave the
  • hatching to some one else. I have
  • not the patience to sit on a nest
  • for twenty-eight days and no
  • more have you, Jemima. You
  • would let them go cold you
  • know you would! I wish to
  • hatch them all by myself,
  • quacked Jemima Puddle-duck. She
  • tried to hide her eggs but they
  • were always found and carried off.

Beatrix Potter
THE TALE OF JEMIMA PUDDLE-DUCK
20
  • 19. When you give her the
  • bubbles, shell probably
  • ask you for a toy. Youll
  • have to find your rubber
  • duck. The duck will
  • remind her of the farm where
  • she was born. She might feel
  • homesick and want to visit her
  • family. Shell want you to come
  • too. Shell look through your
  • closet for a suitcase.

Laura Numeroff
IF YOU GIVE A PIG A PANCAKE
21
  • 20. One winter morning Peter
  • woke up and looked out the
  • window. Snow had fallen
  • during the night. It covered
  • everything as far as he could
  • see. After breakfast he put on
  • his snowsuit and ran outside.
  • The snow was piled up very
  • high along the street to make a
  • path for walking.

Ezra Jack Keats
THE SNOWY DAY
22
I SEE A SONG
  • 21. Ladies Gentlemen! I see
  • a song. I paint music. I hear
  • color. I touch the rainbow,
  • and the deep spring in the
  • ground. My music talks. My
  • colors dance. Come, listen,
  • and let your imagination see
  • your own song.

Eric Carle
23
THE MAGIC SCHOOL BUS INSIDE THE HUMAN BODY
  • 22. It all began when Ms.
  • Fizzle showed our class a
  • filmstrip about the human
  • body. We knew trouble
  • was about to start,
  • because we knew Ms.
  • Fizzle was the strangest
  • teacher in the school.

Joanna Cole
24
CLOUDY WITH A CHANCE OF MEATBALLS
  • 23. In most ways, it was very much like any
  • other tiny town. It had a Main Street lined
  • with stores, houses with trees and gardens
  • around them, a schoolhouse, about three
  • hundred people, and some assorted cats
  • and dogs. But there were no food stores in
  • the town of Chewandswallow. They didn't
  • need any. The sky supplied all the food
  • they could possibly want. The only thing
  • that was really different about
  • Chewandswallow was its weather. It
  • came three times a day, at breakfast,
  • lunch, and dinner. Every thing that
  • everyone ate came from the sky.

Judi Barrett
25
  • 24. She ate my homework,
  • bit Grandma, clawed the
  • curtains, damaged the dishes,
  • endangered the goldfish,
  • flooded the bathroom,
  • grappled with guests, hurled
  • hair balls at our heads,
  • irritated the baby, jumped on
  • the bed, knocked over the
  • lamp, loitered . . .  

Nick Bruel
BAD KITTY
26
  • 25. After she finished she said,
  • When you come home, first I
  • will look to see if you are safe
  • and sound, but then I will look
  • to see if you still have your
  • snow-white mittens. So off
  • Nicki went. And it wasn't long
  • until one of his new mittens
  • dropped in the snow and was
  • left behind.

Jan Brett
THE MITTEN
27
STREGA NONA
Tomie de Paola
  • 26. And Big Anthony sang,
  • Bubble bubble pasta pot
  • Boil me some pasta, nice and hot
  • Im hungry and its time to sup
  • Boil enough pasta to fill me up.
  • And sure enough, the pot bubbled
  • and boiled and began to fill up
  • with pasta.

28
THE PRINCESS AND THE PEA
  • 27. There was a princess
  • standing outside, but oh
  • dear, she was in such a
  • state, what with the rain
  • and the terrible storm!
  • Water was dripping from
  • her hair and her clothes,
  • running in at the toes of her
  • shoes and out at the heels
  • again. But she said she was a
  • real princess.

Hans Christian Andersen
29
HARRY POTTER AND THE GOBLET OF FIRE
  • Remember, if the time should
  • come when you have to make a
  • choice between what is right
  • and what is easy, remember what
  • happened to a boy who was
  • good, and kind, and brave,
  • because he strayed across the
  • path of Lord Voldemort.
  • Remember Cedric Diggory.

J.K. Rowling
30
ANSWERS!!!!
  1. Louisa May Alcott, Little Women
  2. J.M. Barrie, Peter Pan
  3. Lewis Carroll, Jabberwocky
  4. Lois Lowry, The Giver
  5. Robert Frost, The Road Not Taken
  6. Roald Dahl, The Witches
  7. Judy Blume, Tales of a Fourth Grade Nothing
  8. Judith Viorst, Alexander and the Horrible,
    Terrible, No Good, Very Bad Day

31
More answers!!!
  • 9. Audrey Wood, Piggies
  • 10. Mike Thaler, Teacher From the Black Lagoon
  • 11. Shel Silverstein, Runny Babbit
  • 12. Jon Scieszka, Stinky Cheese Man
  • 13. Nancy Van Laan, Possum Come A-Knockin at My
    Door
  • 14. Chris Van Allsburg, Jumanji
  • 15. Maurice Sendak, Outside Over There
  • 16. Dr. Seuss, One Fish, Two Fish, Red Fish, Blue
    Fish
  • 17. David Shannon, No, David!

32
Even more answers . . .
  • 18. Beatrix Potter, The Tale of Jemima Puddleduck
  • 19. Laura Numeroff, If You Give a Pig a Pancake
  • 20. Ezra Jack Keats, The Snowy Day
  • 21. Eric Carle, I See A Song
  • 22. Joanna Cole, Magic School Bus Inside the
    Human Body
  • 23. Judi Barrett, Cloudy With a Chance of
    Meatballs
  • 24. Nick Bruel, Bad Kitty
  • 25. Jan Brett, The Mitten

33
This is the end
  • 26. Tomie de Paola, Strega Nona
  • 27. Hans Christian Anderson, The Princess and the
    Pea
  • 28. J.K. Rowling, Harry Potter and the Goblet of
    Fire
  • BONUS!!!! What book and author
  • is this quote from?
  • The night Max wore his wolf suit and made
    mischief of one kind and another . . .

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