Product Details
Something for Nothing (Aesop Accolades (Awards))

Something for Nothing (Aesop Accolades (Awards))
By Ann Redisch Stampler

This item is not available for purchase from this store.
Buy at Amazon


39 new or used available from $0.01

Average customer review:
(2 customer reviews)

Product Description

Dog lived in the noisiest part of Bialystok. All day long he heard the hubbub of the nearby marketplace, and all night long he heard the banging and clanging of workmen unloading their goods. When he could take the racket no more, Dog set off for the country to find a quieter place to live.

On his first night in his new home, a gang of howling and yowling, hissing and screeching cats terrorize him, destroying his newfound peace and quiet. Inspired by a Jewish folk tale, how Dog outwits the rascally cats makes for a humorous, satisfying story, exuberantly illustrated with stunning jewel-toned paintings reminiscent of Marc Chagall’s. Afterword.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #2309458 in Books
  • Published on: 2003-03-24
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: .1 pounds
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 32 pages

Editorial Reviews

From School Library Journal
Grade 1-3-In this Jewish folktale, a dog outsmarts three cats that harass and attempt to terrorize him when he moves into a new house in the country. Finally, Dog offers them gold in exchange for making as much noise as he heard in Bialystok. The cats eagerly accept his challenge, but after three nights they are left exhausted and greedier than ever. The dog asks that they come back and make more noise, even though he can no longer afford to pay them. Refusing to give him "something for nothing," the cats "never disturbed the peace and quiet of Dog's country cottage ever again." The bold, vibrant watercolors, many of them spreads and full-page illustrations with lots of pink, orange, green, and purple hues, are wonderfully evocative and detailed. In an author's note, Stampler explains that although she has found oral remembrances of this tale, she has not located other written versions. An appealing story that would make a fine read-aloud with lots of sound effects.
Genevieve Gallagher, Orange County Public Library, VA
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist
Gr. 1-3. A city dog moves to the country for some peace and quiet in this Yiddish folktale first relayed to the author by her Eastern European grandmother. Dog can't stand the cacophony of the Bialystok market: "'I will not stay in this banging, clanging, rumbling, shouting, moaning, groaning, clip-clop, clip-clop city for even one more day!' he howled." True to his vow, he packs up his belongings in a cart and settles happily into an abandoned house in the country. But what's this? His first night of bucolic tranquility is shattered by the "dreadful clatter" of three rascally cats who like to stir up trouble. In the end, however, Dog tricks the village vandals into tiring of their own game, and peace is restored to his country cottage. Cohen's wildly colorful, highly stylized paintings are lively and lovely, but they compete with, rather than complement, this old-fashioned tribute to the triumph of wit. Karin Snelson
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Review

"...clever story inspired by a Yiddish folktale...Stampler's cache of onomatopoeic words makes for a diverting read-aloud" Publishers Weekly

"...bold, vibrant watercolors...are wonderfully evocative and detailed...an appealing story that would make a fine read-aloud with...sound effects." SCHOOL LIBRARY JOURNAL School Library Journal

"Yiddish folktale...Cohen's wildly colorful, highly stylized paintings are lively and lovely . . . old-fashioned tribute to the triumph of wit." BOOKLIST Booklist, ALA