Encontre milhões de e-books, audiobooks e muito mais com um período de teste gratuito

Apenas $11.99/mês após o término do seu período de teste gratuito. Cancele a qualquer momento.

O Conto de Jemima Puddle-Duck
O Conto de Jemima Puddle-Duck
O Conto de Jemima Puddle-Duck
E-book33 páginas10 minutos

O Conto de Jemima Puddle-Duck

Nota: 4 de 5 estrelas

4/5

()

Ler a amostra

Sobre este e-book

O Conto de Jemima Puddle-Duck é um livro infantil, escrito e ilustrado por Beatrix Potter, publicado originalmente por Frederick Warne & Co ., em julho de 1908.

Potter compôs o livro na fazenda que comprou em 1905, a propriedade Hill Top. Foi quando suas obras começaram a se concentrar na vida do campo.

Jemima é um pato doméstico da cujos ovos são rotineiramente confiscados e, por esse motivo, procura por um lugar longe da fazenda onde ela possa chocar seus ovos, sem interferência humana. Nessa busca ela acaba enganada por uma raposa.

Esse livro é considerado um dos melhores do Potter. Em 1993, foi transmitido como um episódio no animado BBC série de antologia , O Mundo de Peter Rabbit e seus Amigos.

Armada de Papel traz os contos de Beatrix Potter para a seu Kindle, na série O Universo de Beatrix Potter:
1. O Conto de Peter Rabbit
2. O Conto de Benjamin Bunny
3. O Conto do Esquilo Nutkin
4. O Conto de Tom Kitten
5. O Conto de Jemima Puddle-Duck
IdiomaPortuguês
EditoraXinXii
Data de lançamento19 de nov. de 2014
ISBN9781310034459
O Conto de Jemima Puddle-Duck

Leia mais títulos de Beatrix Potter

Autores relacionados

Relacionado a O Conto de Jemima Puddle-Duck

Ebooks relacionados

Ficção Geral para você

Visualizar mais

Artigos relacionados

Categorias relacionadas

Avaliações de O Conto de Jemima Puddle-Duck

Nota: 3.930955952380952 de 5 estrelas
4/5

210 avaliações6 avaliações

O que você achou?

Toque para dar uma nota

A avaliação deve ter pelo menos 10 palavras

  • Nota: 5 de 5 estrelas
    5/5
    Jemima Puddle-Duck is yearning to set her own eggs. She leaves the haven of the farm to find a nesting spot where they won't take her eggs and give them to the hen to hatch. Danger ensues.When Beatrix Potter decides to write a suspenseful tale, she is very good at it! This is one of my favorites.
  • Nota: 3 de 5 estrelas
    3/5
    This book is a great example of tall tales. This is because of its use of the main character and the way she is able to portray a life lesson. Another reason is that the character is farm animals and can be relatable to students, but with them talking makes the book unrealistic. This book is a goose who wants nothing more then to be able to hatch the eggs she lays, but can't because they keep being taken for food. The duck wanders into a forest and meets a gentleman that were a fox. He allows her to lay her eggs there. He then invites her to a special mean that he asks her to bring species. Little did she know the fox was planning to make a meal out of her. When she came back she got trapped into a room and to her rescue was the farm dogs. She returned back to the farm safe and was able to lay eggs and hatch them on the farm.Use: I would use this in my class to introduce the genre of fairy tall and tall tale and compare and contrast the genres. I would also use it to show series of events and how does that affect the main character.Media: Colored Pencil
  • Nota: 3 de 5 estrelas
    3/5
    Yay for Project Gutenberg. Really, though, these stories by Potter can get rather intense. Jemima is an awfully stupid duck, though. One other thing - where's the drake?
  • Nota: 3 de 5 estrelas
    3/5
    Best of the illustrations in the Peter Rabbit series, but the book seemed incomplete, like it was missing a huge chunk (seriously, it's about a a fox and a goose, where is the conflict?).
  • Nota: 3 de 5 estrelas
    3/5
    Cute illustrations- a little wordy, maybe for slightly older children than it first appears.
  • Nota: 5 de 5 estrelas
    5/5
    This was a lovely story. I read it again after finding it in the loft. The illustrations in the book are fantastic, they have so much depth but the writing itself was brilliant too. There was no bad grammar. I hate the 'Charlie and Lola' series that encourages bad grammar because it is perceived as cute. The grammar in this is good and it also has a large vocabulary.The story itself is good. I felt myself wanting to read on and find out what happened next because it wasn't very predictable, but when Jemima mentioned a handsome man with whiskers and in the picture was a fox, I thought 'Oh no!'. I thought the fairytale happy ending might happen, but then it didn't. It had a bit of Grimm's fairytales evilness to it. However, after the fox had been caught I thought the bit after was a bit unnecessary.A classic series!

Pré-visualização do livro

O Conto de Jemima Puddle-Duck - Beatrix Potter

Está gostando da amostra?
Página 1 de 1