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And to Think That We Thought That We'd Never Be Friends

Illustrated by Kevin Hawkes
Paperback
$7.99 US
8.5"W x 11.11"H x 0.17"D   | 7 oz | 48 per carton
On sale Feb 25, 2003 | 40 Pages | 978-0-440-41776-7
Age 3-7 years | Preschool - 2
Reading Level: Lexile NP
In rhyming verse that’s a deliberate homage to Dr. Seuss, poet and picture book author Mary Ann Hoberman takes on quarreling and its consequences, and shows how turning fighters into friends leads to greater peace. It all starts with a fighting brother and sister, who make up with the help of another sibling. When the family begins fighting with their noisy neighbors, it’s music that brings them together. Soon the whole town is marching in a parade, and eventually the parade swells to include the whole country, and even the animals. By the end of this optimistic picture book, the whole world is united in friendship.
Mary Ann Hoberman is the author of And to Think That We Thought That We'd Never Be Friends, A House if a House for Me, The Llama Who Had No Pajama and many other children's books. She received the 2003 Award for Excellence in Poetry for Children. Hoberman passed away in 2011.  View titles by Mary Ann Hoberman
Kevin Hawkes is the author and illustrator of The Wicked Big Toddlah and The Wicked Big Toddlah Goes to New York, and is the illustrator of many well-loved books for young readers including Imagine That:! How Dr. Seuss Wrote the Cat in the Hat, Library Lion, My Little Sister Ate One Hare, My Little Sister Hugged an Ape, And to Think That We Thought That We'd Never Be Friends, The Road to OzVelma Gratch, and The Way Cool Butterfly. He lives in Gorham, Maine. View titles by Kevin Hawkes

About

In rhyming verse that’s a deliberate homage to Dr. Seuss, poet and picture book author Mary Ann Hoberman takes on quarreling and its consequences, and shows how turning fighters into friends leads to greater peace. It all starts with a fighting brother and sister, who make up with the help of another sibling. When the family begins fighting with their noisy neighbors, it’s music that brings them together. Soon the whole town is marching in a parade, and eventually the parade swells to include the whole country, and even the animals. By the end of this optimistic picture book, the whole world is united in friendship.

Author

Mary Ann Hoberman is the author of And to Think That We Thought That We'd Never Be Friends, A House if a House for Me, The Llama Who Had No Pajama and many other children's books. She received the 2003 Award for Excellence in Poetry for Children. Hoberman passed away in 2011.  View titles by Mary Ann Hoberman
Kevin Hawkes is the author and illustrator of The Wicked Big Toddlah and The Wicked Big Toddlah Goes to New York, and is the illustrator of many well-loved books for young readers including Imagine That:! How Dr. Seuss Wrote the Cat in the Hat, Library Lion, My Little Sister Ate One Hare, My Little Sister Hugged an Ape, And to Think That We Thought That We'd Never Be Friends, The Road to OzVelma Gratch, and The Way Cool Butterfly. He lives in Gorham, Maine. View titles by Kevin Hawkes