A sterling collection, these exist as archaic bits of language that we save which are no longer attached to a meaning. Important to the canon, this may have a home on reference shelves more than in picture book collections.
This hilarious story of finding friends in unlikely places will surely entertain and surprise early elementary–age children, and given the cartoon-style illustrations, pique an interest in graphic novels. Share this one along with Morag Hood’s Brenda Is a Sheep and Lucky Platt’s Imagine a Wolf
Straightforward text combined with funny illustrations make for an instructive primer on how to apologize. Children will delight in the hilarious animal antics while absorbing the explanatory lesson without didacticism.