View Cart   |   My Account

   Search products:  

 

 

 
 Toys
      Active & Outdoor Play
     Arts & Crafts
     Bath & Water Play
     Building

     Dolls & Plush
     Infant & Toddler
     Musical Instruments
     Pretend Play

     Science & Nature
     Skill Builders & Puzzles
     Vehicles & Trains

  Books & Language

     Board Books (0 - 4)
     Picture Books (3 - 7)
     Early Readers (5 - 8)
     Chapter Books (7+)

     Activities & Crafts
     Award Winners

     Education / Nonfiction
      Foreign Languages

      For Parents
 
  Music

      Children's Favorites
      Classical/Instrumental

      Folk

      Lullabies

      Multicultural

 
  Global Child
      Africa
      Asia
      Australia
      Europe
      Latin America

      US & Canada

 
 

 

    

 

 

 

You may also like:
 

  

 

 

Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What Do You See? (board book version)

 

details

 

 

 




 

 





 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



 


 Home/Books/Board Books


Polar Bear, Polar Bear What Do You Hear?

 

 

Written By: Bill Martin

Illustrated ByEric Carle

 

List Price:  $7.95

 

AvailabilityUsually ships within 1 - 2 business days

 

 

View larger image

 

 

 

Product Details

 

Publisher:  Henry Holt & Company, Incorporated

Date Published:  July 1997

Format:  board book

Pages:  32 pages

 

 

Reviews:

 

 

From Publishers Weekly


It's been 25 years since these two talented men put their heads together, but the fruit of their latest collaboration is well worth the wait. Continuing in the spirit of Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What Do You See? , their new book incorporates the same clean design and crisp text, but this time the action takes place at the zoo, where elephants, hippos, lions and such are asked what they hear--each answer leads to the animal on the next page, and culminates with a zookeeper who "hears" a pageful of multiracial children disguised as their favorite animals. Carle's characteristically inventive, jewel-toned artwork forms a seamless succession of images that fairly leap off the pages, and educator Martin, ever tuned in to what children like best, has assembled a thoroughly rowdy menagerie--including a fluting flamingo, bellowing walrus and hissing boa constrictor, to name a few--imitations of whose sounds will doubtless soon be echoing in many homes and classrooms. A visually and aurally splashy work, this is a splendid successor to Brown Bear , one that no fan of that popular bruin will want to be without. Ages 2-4.
Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.


From School Library Journal


PreSchool-Grade 1-- In a logical sensory follow-up to Martin's and Carle's wildly successful Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What Do You See? (Holt, 1983), this dynamic duo now offers sounds. The polar bear hears a lion roaring, who hears a hippopotamus snorting, who hears a flamingo fluting (!), who hears a zebra braying, and so on through a varied list of animals. At last the zookeeper announces that he hears children roaring, snorting, fluting, etc. While the format is very similar to the previous book, Carle's trademark collages have never been more beautiful. Huge animals fill the double-page spreads, glowing with light-filled colors, sans superflouous background. Teachers will smile with delight when they see this wonderful book, and students are sure to utter the familiar request, "Have you got another one like this one?" --Ruth Semrau, Lovejoy School, Allen, TX
Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.


From Kirkus Reviews


After a full generation, a companion to a perennial favorite (Brown Bear, Brown Bear, What Do You See?, 1967). In the interim, Carle's bold, colorful art has become a bit more sophisticated, though no more appealing. The pattern is similar: in response to a query modeled on the title, each animal now hears the next--the flamingo says, ``I hear a zebra braying in my ear,'' the zebra hears a boa constrictor hissing; and so on. At the end, a zookeeper hears a group of children, each imitating one of the animals. Attractive but not quite up to its predecessor: the text seems a little strained (especially some of the attributed voices--do peacocks yelp?), and the conclusion lacks the extra levels of meaning that made Brown Bear special. (Picture book. 2- 6) -- Copyright ©1991, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

 









Copyright (c) 2004. Inch by Inch Kids, Inc. All rights reserved.