Latino Books


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Related Subjects: Castillo, Ana Cofer, Judith Ortiz Santiago, Esmeralda Alvarez, Julia Bevin, Teresa Benitez, Sandra Chavez, Denise Garcia, Cristina Diaz, Junot Thomas, Piri Hijuelos, Oscar Rodriguez, Richard Moraga, Cherrie Obejas, Achy Reyes, Guillermo Gaspar de Alba, Alicia Mora, Pat Anaya, Rudolfo Svich, Caridad
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Latino Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Latino
Fancy Nancy (Spanish edition): Nancy la Elegante (Fancy Nancy)
Published in Hardcover by Rayo (2008-05-01)
Author: Jane O'connor
List price: $16.99
New price: $8.40
Used price: $8.50

Average review score:

One of our favorites
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-10-01
Nancy is sweet, cute, fun and fancy!! This book is perfect for any girly girl- big or small! It's also a great way to teach your little ones BIG words!
Mommy's High Heel Shoes

Wonderful!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-16
This book is adorable especially for little girls who like to dress up and look fancy. The story is heart warming and funny but in the end, it teaches about love and family. Nancy's search for way to sound fancier also teaches children wonderful new vocabulary words(sometime in French as well).

Creepy Cover
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-22
The pictures inside and the story may be uber-cute but doesn't anyone find the cover picture a little bit JonBenet Ramsey creepy? It's basically what makes me reluctant to give this to any little girl.

Love to Be Fancy
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-11
What a wonderful book! Well, I admit, mostly I like looking at the pictures. But even for someone who's completely grown out of pink and purple, I often read this book wishing I could have the self-confidence to dress just like Nancy. I've read things about this book saying that there is no deep message, but I think there are several. I love that Nancy's parents make room for her to be herself even though they don't act like she does. And I love that Nancy has the desire even at such a young age to see beauty and elegance in everything around her. Her parents don't let her do everything she wants (think of the time she goes to her grandparents' anniversary party) but they let her do enough to let her personality shine through. And as for being too dramatic - I believe that the only people who believe that over-the-top clothing and attitudes are wrong are the people who need to take a deep breath and figure out why they spend that much time thinking about stuff like that.
Keep being Fancy, Nancy!!

Do you really want your child to think like Fancy Nancy?
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-16
How will this book make children who don't have fancy things at home feel? I think materialism is a vice that doesn't need to be taught in a children's book. Enough people learn this on their own, why try to instill it in a 3 year old? If you want a book about a cute silly girly-girl, buy Madeline.

Latino
Big Red Barn (Spanish edition): El gran granero rojo
Published in Hardcover by Rayo (1996-02-29)
Author: Margaret Wise Brown
List price: $16.99
New price: $9.73
Used price: $7.17

Average review score:

Great bedtime book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-15
Illustrates animals going to bed! I love books that show everyone is going to sleep!

just the best!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-27
What a wonderful story! The rhyming text is a pleasure to read, and the book progresses from day to night, making it a perfect bedtime story. I've read it so many times to my five year old twins that we now know it by heart. Get it!!!

Not a favorite of my sons
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-15
My son loves to read books, but this one does not keep his attention. He likes Goodnight Moon, the Boyton Books, and others, but this doesn't keep his interest. I do like that it shows various animals and their noises.

Utopia
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-10
This is one of my favorite books to read to my son. The prose is beautiful, concise, and profound. It's a very subtle book and takes some quiet time to truly appreciate it. The Big Red Barn is a picture of utopia; animals coexisting in peace, playing throughout the day, and then resting at night.

Great story and Lovely Pictures
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-25
I was given this book as a gift just after my son was born. He is now coming up to three months and this is a book I just love to read to him. I am an animal lover myself and so I like the fact it is based around animals. I think the pictures are great and he is already taking a good look at them. The next step for me will be taking him to see the animals in person but until that happens we will live on the farm through this book. I have found it very pleasant to read as it has a basic rhythm to it, which means I don't mind repeating it which I am sure will help him with his development. I would recommend this book to many!!

Latino
Caps for Sale Big Book (Reading Rainbow Book)
Published in Paperback by HarperTrophy (1996-01-31)
Author:
List price: $24.99
New price: $13.24
Used price: $12.03

Average review score:

Me and my 2.5 year old son love this book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-30
This is a great book for kids, even young ones around 2.5 years old. It's an engaging story and my son loves the part where the man wakes up to find his hats gone, and looks up and sees all the monkeys wearing the hats! He asks me to read it everynight, and remembers the phrase "caps for sale."

love this book
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-30
I loved this book as a child and I love sharing it with my children.

Rutgers University Project on Economics and Children
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-15
Years ago, a unique peddler stood out from other salespeople because he carried all his goods on top of his head. He neatly stacked a bunch of gray, brown, blue, and red caps in a single pile and carefully balanced them on his head as he walked through town, calling "Caps! Caps for Sale! Fifty cents a cap!" But alas, on this particular day, no one purchases a cap. With no money to buy lunch, the peddler opts for a walk and a nap in the countryside instead. His troubles multiply when he wakes up to the sight of a group of playful monkeys in the treetop, each wearing one of his caps for sale. How will he get the caps back?

This classic story, reissued in a new hardcover edition, does not grow old with its humor, ingenuity, and charm. Underlying the story is an important set of economics concepts related to buyers and sellers in the goods market. If the demand for caps had been a little stronger, the peddler may have been able to avoid this whole predicament, but therein lies the book's merriment. Caps for Sale gets top marks for delivering a story with substantive content that children will enjoy and remember.

Childhood favorite is now my child's favorite
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-03
This is one of the few books I remember my elementary school librarian reading to us during my childhood. I loved the story of the multi colored caps balancing on the peddler's head as he walked through town yelling "caps for sale!" Then to find that as he napped, his caps disappeared. Looking around for them post-nap, he discovers a band of monkeys in the tree wearing them. He tries to get the caps back but each time he yells at the monkeys, they just ape his actions. Finally they throw the caps down and he continues on his way selling his multi-colored caps. I highly recommend this book for all children. My daughter is 2, almost 3, and she also LOVES this story. She finds the monkeys funny - especially how I imitate their actions.

As much song as story.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-18
This makes the top ten list out of all the great picture books we read to our kids when they were young. I never tired of reading it. So simple, symmetric, even musical. The story? How does the peddler get the monkeys to give back all the caps they've stolen from him and carried up into the tree? Okay, I'm the publisher of One Monkey Books, so call me biased. But try this one on your three or five or year old, and really get into singing, "Caps for sale! Caps for sale! Fifty cents a cap!" It's been around for ages already, and this book will still be there when your kids are having kids. Nutty to Meet You! Dr. Peanut Book #1

Latino
Ramona the Pest
Published in Library Binding by HarperCollins (1968-04-01)
Author: Beverly Cleary
List price: $16.89
Used price: $0.01

Average review score:

sooooo true to life!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-05
How I missed this classic growing up, I'll never know. But my son has discovered the Ramona books, and they are wonderful and very true to life. Ramona's thought-processes and antics are so real, I now know that my son has been behaving like a normal kid! Cleary is so accurate in rendering the child's perspective and writing about it in a way that young children can identify with, that this book can't fail to appeal to everyone, now and for years to come. It hasn't dated, and the humor holds up well. Don't miss this series--your little reader will be eager to pick up the entire series.

Another classic from Beverly Cleary
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-13
Although it was first published in the 1960s, "Ramona The Pest" still speaks to the lives of children today, as a five-year old Ramona Quimby enters the world of "big kids" and goes off to kindergarten. Funny, heartfelt and honest, this book centers on Ramona's eagerness to please her new teacher, Miss Binney, and the difficulties of a headstrong little girl trying to mind her temper and get along with other kids in a complex social situation. This was the first solo Ramona book (Henry Huggins and Ramona's older sister Beezus make appearances, but they are not central to the story) and was the start of a series of Ramonacentric adventures. It includes some classic Cleary gags, such as Ramona getting the words to the "Star Spangled Banner" wrong ("by the dawnzer lee light...") and Ramona's brief career as a "kindergarten dropout". Great stuff - still holds up today. (ReadThatAgain children's book reviews)

Ramona the pest is great
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-10
I really loved this book. It was a lot of fun to read! It is great for kids of all ages, as it can remind everyone of their struggles as an elementary student.

It's hard to be five...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-23
Five-year-old Ramona Quimby is tired of being called a pest. It's not her fault she doesn't know as much as her big sister Beezus, or that she's always so eager to get things done, is it?

This year, Ramona is finally starting kindergarten. After what felt like years of waiting, she's excited at the idea of learning to read and write like Beezus.

But kindergarten is full of its own problems. As much as Ramona loves her teacher, she isn't always sure that Miss Binney loves her back -- or what she's done to make her unhappy. Ramona also quibbles with Howie, a neighborhood boy who alternates between being her friend and being so exasperating he makes her furious; longs to pull the curls of her classmate Susan, and to kiss shy little Davy.

As always, Ramona is a believable character, likeable and just like any other child readers might hope to meet. After becoming introduced to Ramona, young readers will clamor for the other books, eager to find out what happens to the irrepressible girl next.

Pest? Nope, just Excited
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-08
It's finally happened! Ramona Quimby is old enough to attend kindergarten! She can't wait to do big kid stuff like learn to read and participate in show and tell. Parts of school are confusing, like the song about the dawnzer. But she is making new friends, like Davey, her first crush, and Susan, whose hair is so curly it just cries out to be tugged. But when things go horribly wrong, will Ramona ever return?

I had read this book before but had forgotten just how wonderful it was until I reread it recently. Author Beverly Cleary expertly captures the emotions and reactions of a 5 year old. Heck, I think at times Ramona is more honest then many adults are today. While some of her behavior isn't acceptable, it is understandable. And absolutely funny. There are so many wonderfully funny moments here that anyone will relate to.

The story itself is more episodic then a true novel. But that doesn't mean it isn't entertaining. I certainly didn't want to put it down.

The book was originally written in the late 60's, so it might be slightly dated, but this really is a minor issue. The heart of the story is Ramona and her new kindergarten world.

Beverly Cleary has a wonderful pen for writing. The book works well for mid to late elementary school students to read to themselves. Or it can be read aloud with absolute ease.

If you haven't discovered the joys of kindergarten with Ramona, pick up this book today. You'll laugh and smile as you are carried away to a world that was simpler.

Latino
De La Cabeza a Los Pies: Head to Toe (Spanish Edition)
Published in Hardcover by Rayo (2003-03-01)
Author:
List price: $16.99
New price: $8.15
Used price: $7.65

Average review score:

Up and moving!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-10-02
I don't think I've ever quite understood the whole Eric Carle thing. Still, I have to hand it him that his paintins are incredible and the books are simple enough one can force a dozen school lessons from them. This particular one gives repetition to the "I can" phrase as kids imitate the movements of various animals--that's a fun side effect.

Eric Carle does it again!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-25
Our 20 month old and 3 year old boys love this Eric Carle gem. It combines beautiful pictures of animals with simple rhythmic text showing body parts and actions -- turning heads, bending necks, raising shoulders, arching backs and others. Best of all, it allows active participation by imitating what is on the page. We have purchased quite a few books but this one is magic.

Great book!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-24
My 18 month old son loves this book! He watched me do the movements as I read it and now he does them on his own when I read the book! Very cute and interactive.

Good "move around" type of story
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-24
In this book, various animals and children move parts of their body and encourage other children to do so.

Eric Carle is truly a master of this kind of text. Each spread follows the same repetitive structure - "I'm a $ANIMAL and I can $VERB my $BODYPART - can you? I can do it!" - which makes it very suitable both for young children learning to speak and older children figuring out how to read.

The only part I don't like is at the end, when the little boy says to his parrot (in a neat turnaround) "I am I, and I can wiggle my toe". It doesn't sound very idiomatic to me - I would say, in normal speech "I am me", or perhaps (in the form followed in the rest of the book) "I am a child" or "I am a person" or "I am a human".

This book is also, obviously good to encourage kids to move during a rainy-day storytime, or to let them move if they always are fidgeting during storytime.

Lots of Fun!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-22
This is an excellent, fun book. My 2yr 7 month daughter mimics each of the animals. Its a lot of interactive fun!

Latino
Salsa, Soul, and Spirit: Leadership for a Multicultural Age
Published in Paperback by Berrett-Koehler Publishers (2007-04-28)
Author: Juana Bordas
List price: $17.95
New price: $10.82
Used price: $7.70

Average review score:

Leading with great spirit!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-22

This book reflects the life experience of a woman of color who has shattered many glass ceilings and has paved the way for others to follow. Bordas now beckons us to join her in building the inclusive and multicultural society. Her view of leadership is the missing link. For too long, leadership has been dominated by a white, male orientation. Hooray! Now women and people of color can embrace their ways of leading and understand the power of their community-centered and socially responsible styles.

Leadership for a multicultural age
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-10
Juana Bordas provides a fresh perspective on leadership by weaving the traditions of Latino, African American and Native American's together in her book. Her progressive, forward thinking views offer tools for leading a new generation of young people with an appetite for integration and inclusion. This book provides guidance for the historic times we're living.

Different Faces Make a Better World
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-29
I have two children who are growing up in Denver, Colorado which is a multicultural city. We have been fortunate that our last 3 mayors have been White, Black and Latino. Our city council became a majority female in the nineties. Salsa, Soul and Spirit challenges us to not just invite women and people of color to the table- but to make sure we embrace diversity and utilize the gifts and assets they bring. The book provides the leadership tools we need to change the way we operate so that the values, experiences and history of all people are included in the way we operate everyday. Authentic diversity can't just be business as usual with different faces and races around the table! What a great example this helps to set for our children.

If only....
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-29
If only the wisdom in this book could be transferred to the minds of the leaders of our planet. Anyone who wishes to increase understanding and harmony should read this book and become inspired enough to start making some changes in the ways we relate to each other.

Inspirational and Insighful
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-15
The story of a Latina finding her way and success in a non-diverse society coupled with insights into the "soul" of Latino, Black, and American Indian leaders. A must read for the leaders of tomorrow trying to bridge the gap between saying we are diverse and successfully reaching that goal.

Latino
Rayuela (Coleccion Archivos)
Published in Unknown Binding by ALLCA XXe, Universite de Paris X, Centre de recherches latino-americaines (1992)
Author: Julio Cortazar
List price:

Average review score:

Julio Cortázar: RAYUELA
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-16
Definitivamente estoy muy satisfecho con mi compra. Amazon.com siempre es muy puntual y eficaz en cumplir sus ordenes. Gracias! Cortázar es uno de los mejores escritores de Latinoamérica y el mejor en el género del Surrealismo y el relato del "sueño orínico." Sugiero que todos los buenos conocedores de Literatura Latinoamericana estudien este texto ya que nadie puede componer un laberinto imaginario mejor que Cortázar. También sugiero su libro de cuentos "La autopista del sur y otros cuentos."

Rayuela
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-01
Fascinating experiment with words, literary structures, feelings and emotions, Rayuela, in the words of its author, gives a chance to the reader to take an active role in the reading process by freeing up his or her own creativity to choose how to go about this game, what pages to jump to, what chapters to skip, in a stream of consciousness in which many will see themselves reflected.

Simplemente fantástica
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-20
Una novela que marca a todo el que la lee... el lenguaje en su máxima y más hermosa expresión.

La mejor novela que he leído nunca
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-12-19
La historia con Bèrthe Trépat, la carta de La Maga a Rocamadour, Talita pasando por el tablón y, claro, el capítulo 7 (toco tu boca...). Este libro me deja sin aliento. Nunca, pero NUNCA he leído nada de semejante belleza.

"Of all our feelings the only one which doesn't belong to us is hope. Hope belongs to life, it's life defending itself."
Helpful Votes: 17 out of 18 total.
Review Date: 2005-09-13
It has taken me years to sit down and finally make a serious commitment to read Julio Cortazar's "Hopscotch/La Rayuela." I cannot think of a better companion to devote a few weeks to, maybe even longer - hey, whatever it takes! It depends on your reading speed and the time you take to truly savor the poetry of the author's language. So, be willing to make a small personal investment in this very special novel, and the reward you reap will be a worthy one. Julio Cortazar will take you to places you have never been before in literature, and may never experience again. I read "Hopscotch" over this past summer, after a thirty year delay. I can be very stubborn about putting off what is good for me!! The author's imagination is boundless, his prose rich and luminous, his wit and sophistication rare, the dialogue brilliant, the plot...I won't attempt to describe that with a few adjectives. Wander through the extraordinary labyrinthine plot on you own - the way is yours to discover. I promise, you won't get lost!

I was introduced to "La Rayuela" about thirty years ago, when a close friend, with similar reading tastes, gave me the book. Enthused after just reading the novel, he told me that I reminded him of one of the characters, La Maga. (What a compliment...I think!). I was living in Latin America at the time. With personal interests at stake and much curiosity, I bought a copy in Spanish, which I read with some fluency back then. After experimenting with which way to approach the novel, and trying both ways, I gave up...and just read the parts about La Maga. I had little patience at that point in my life, and needed to acquire some, and to read slower, with more of a sense of play and participation. Cortazar wants his readers to participate - to make reading his book an interactive experience, not a passive one. I was and still feel touched when I remember my friend's comments regarding La Maga. She is a magnificent character and Cortazer's prose, his language, (Spanish), is exquisite. So, about a year later, I thought I'd give it another try, in English, perhaps with better results. None! I just wasn't ready, I guess. That happens to me with fiction occasionally. I have to be open to the experience. Yet, after all these years, I still thought of Horacio Oliveira and La Maga from time to time. And why not? They are truly unforgettable. As I wrote above, I did make time, at last. For an adventure of a lifetime, I recommend you do the same.

When Julio Cortazar published "La Rayuela" in 1966, he turned the conventional novel upside-down and the literary world on its ear with this experiment in writing fiction. He soon became an important influence on writers everywhere. "Hopscotch" is considered to be one of the best novels written in Spanish. The work is interactive, where readers are invited to rearrange its text and read sections in different sequences. Read in a linear fashion, "Hopscotch" contains 700 pages, 155 chapters in three sections: "From the Other Side," and "From This Side" - the first two sections are sustained by relatively chronological narratives and so contrast greatly with the third section, "From Diverse Sides," (subtitled "Expendable Chapters"), which includes philosophical extrapolation, character study, allusions and quotations, and an entirely different version of the "ending."

The book has no table of contents, but rather a "Table of Instructions." There, we learn that two approved readings are possible: from Chapter 1 through 56 "in a normal fashion", or from Chapter 73 to Chapter 1 to... well, wherever the chapters lead you. The instructions are all in your book and are extremely clear. At the end of each chapter there is a numeric indicator to lead the reader to the next chapter. One never knows where one will be lead. Due to its meandering nature, "Hopscotch" has been called a "Proto-hypertext" novel. Cortázar probably had this work in mind when he stated, "If I had the technical means to print my own books, I think I would keep on producing collage-books."

Horacio Oliveira, our protagonist and sometimes narrator, is an Argentinean expatriate, an intellectual and professed writer in 1950's bohemian Paris. He and his close friends, members of "the Club," do lots of partying, drinking, and intellectualizing, discussing art, literature, music and solving the world's problems. Oliveira lives with and loves La Maga, an exotic young woman, somewhat whimsical, at times almost ephemeral, who leaves behind her, like the scent of a light perfume, a feeling of poignancy and inevitable loss. La Maga refuses to plan her encounters with Oliveira in advance, preferring instead to run into each other by chance. Then she and Oliveira celebrate the series of circumstances that reunite them. Eventually, he loses La Maga, who loses her child. With her absence, Oliveira realizes how empty and meaningless his life is and he returns to his native Buenos Aires. There he finds work first as a salesman, then a keeper of a circus cat, and an attendant in an insane asylum.

As Oliveira wends his way through France, Uruguay and Argentina looking for his lost love, "Hopscotch's" narrative takes on an emotionally intense stream of consciousness style, rich in metaphor. Back In Argentina, Oliveira shares his life with his bizarre double, Traveler, and Traveler's wife, Talita, whom Oliveira attempts to remake into a facsimile of La Maga.

The game of hopscotch is only developed as a conceit late in the narrative. It is first used to describe Oliveira's confused love for La Maga as "that crazy hopscotch." The theme develops as a metaphor for reaching Heaven from Earth. "When practically no one has learned how to make the pebble climb into Heaven, childhood is over all of a sudden and you're into novels, into the anguish of the senseless divine trajectory, into the speculation about another Heaven that you have to learn to reach too." The variations on the children's game are described as "spiral hopscotch, rectangular hopscotch, fantasy hopscotch, not played very often." The allusions continue and include some beautiful passages.

"Hopscotch" is much more than a novel. Ultimately, it is best left for each reader to define what it is for himself/herself. Pablo Neruda in a famous quote said, "People who do not read Cortazar are doomed. Not to read him is a serious invisible disease." I don't know whether I would go so far. Remember, I put off the experience for many years. But this is one novel that should be read during one's lifetime. It is brilliant and it is fun!
JANA

Latino
Dora's Storytime Collection (Dora the Explorer)
Published in Hardcover by Simon Spotlight/Nickelodeon (2003-12-02)
Author: Various
List price: $10.95
New price: $7.92
Used price: $4.30

Average review score:

Great value
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-28
I bought this for my daughter who loves Dora books. This book has a bunch of great titles and was an awesome price ($5!). The only thing is that pages started to fall out within a week of getting it. I was able to tape them back in, but it was kind of disappointing.

Excellent Choice
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-08
My three years old daughter simply loves this book. I have been reading the book to her more than 20 times if it is not 30 times already. She has been bring the book almost every night for bedtime story since the book was came to my door (the binding of hardcover becomes wiggly already). I am enjoying her responses when I read questions in the middle of the stories, just like Dora asked questions in the animation series. The book is big and colorful and lines of story are just short enough to keep my girl's attention to the page. It is clearly my best book purchase I ever made for my girl.

Too basic but it's Dora
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-02
These stories are VERY short, basic and not very interesting. BUT, it's Dora, so my daughters still ask to read them.

Great for long trip
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-02
Bought this as a surprise gift for my 2.5yo dd for a long plane trip we were taking. She loved all the stories, and I felt there was a nice variety of stories included. Great for any Dora fan, as long as you don't already own many Dora stories (to keep from having duplicates).

Cool Book for Dora lovers
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-14
My son likes Dora. He loves this book. I read it to him every night. Some stories are too short though.

Latino
Show Me Your Smile!: A Visit to the Dentist
Published in Library Binding by Topeka Bindery (2005-01)
Author: C Ricci
List price: $12.90
New price: $5.20

Average review score:

Helpful in preparing my 3 year old for first dentist visit
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-23
Fun and light hearted view from Dora's perspective how fun and important it is to visit a dentist. This book familiarizes young ones with the experience of visiting the dentist, from the tools used to details of the entire examination. My son likes the story and asks me to read it often.

Good book, easily destroyed
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-12
The concept is great, anything to help us brush the little ones teeth. For some reason I thought this was one of the books with thick pages that can stand up to the kids. It is not. Has thin pages that are destroyed in no time.

must have for kids who dont do well at dentist office
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-09-03
my son never let the dentist perform the full cleaning until after we read this book together. kids who like dora will most likely respond well on their next dental visit when they see dora acting like a big girl and letting the dentist examine and clean her teeth. i convinced my son that the dentist will make his teeth white and shiny like dora's - he fell for it like a champ! thanks Dora!! :-)

Dora has it down!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-16
It's a good idea to start early so when that time comes to go the the dentist, your toddler will be willing to sit there just long enough to complete the checkup. Dora rocks when it comes to getting kids to do things like say words, jump up and down, whatever. A must have.

Bought at 2 - used it at 3
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-29
We started reading it every day 2 weeks before her first dentist appointment. Great book! Worked like a charm!

Latino
America Libre (Edition Two)
Published in Paperback by Grand Central Publishing (2009-03-06)
Author: Raul Ramos Sanchez
List price: $16.95
New price: $16.95
Used price: $15.95

Average review score:

A Page-Turner and a Timely Topic
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-16
America Libre is a real page-turner and I'm looking forward to the next book. Immigration is a timely topic, and Raul Ramos Sanchez illustrates realistically how ordinary people and whole societies can fall into violence.

Wonderfully uncomfortable
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-21
This is the kind of book that jumps alive in your hands. It whispers to you of love and compassion, and shrieks at you from the depths of hatred and confusion. In dealing with the immigration issue this book is certainly timely, but I believe its greatest value actually lies in the wonderfully uncomfortable way in which it shatters the over simplification which plagues most of the world's problems - that there is simply good and bad, right and wrong, Latino and Gringo. What a great gift this author has given us in these pages, where innocents become enemies, heroes disappoint and hope kindles in dark places. As much homage as this book pays to the Latino cause, it also beckons to the broader human cause: Let us all be aware of the slippery slope that constitutes our perspectives and judgments. Let us all treat with reverence the complexity of our community. And let us all think twice, even thrice, before we decide our choices. Read it, and most importantly, read it well!

America Libre
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-13
I was sucked into the story about 40 pages in and was unable to put it down. I finished America Libre in two nights. (With a new baby in the house, sleep is at a premium; if my husband had not ripped the book out of my hands the other night, I would have read it straight through till morning). I am eagerly waiting for the second installment. As a poli-sci major I'm a pretty hard sell on military and political thrillers; but I would stack this up against a Uris or Clancy novel. Considering current immigration laws springing up across the US (Oklahoma and Vermont) and rising public tempatures regarding illegals - all aimed at Latinos; America Libre feels more like historical fact than a possible future. The book feels current and it's carefully crafted step-by-step "how to start a revolution" makes it more than believable; and more than a little scary.

Up to the minute read!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-22
This was a fast-paced contemporary story - one that made me question my conscious and unconscious assumptions about other cultures and how I relate to them. It was scary to watch the evolution of the believable plot!

Worth your time
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2007-06-04
The story was both thought-provoking and an action-packed page turner, which is a rare combination indeed. The plot device of having a single event mushroom into something huge reminded me of Tom Clancy novels like Debt of Honor. Once I got to the book, I went from cover to cover during the space of a plane trip over a long weekend. The book starts fast and keeps a quick pace. Let's hope that the story is a worst case scenario that never comes to pass.


Books-Under-Review-->Arts-->Literature-->Cultural-->Latino-->1
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