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Dobry (Puffin Newbery Library)

Dobry (Puffin Newbery Library)

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A Bulgarian dreamer...
Review: I agree with R. D. Allison about the split-personality of the books. I think, though, that the author was trying to show how Dobry was growing up. In the beginning, he is satisfied with slow country life but gradually grows to realize his dream is to become an artist.

DOBRY is a good book for learning about the culture of Bulgarian peasants. It is rich in the folk stories--how God created man and Hadutzi-Dare saved the world--and everyday life of these people. Also, the author conveys the village's excitement when the massage bear (you'll learn what it is!) comes to herald the summer.

The language is beautiful and Dobry is an eternal optimist. The characters represent different facets of village life--for example, the rotund mayor explains government and Dobry's grandfather shows Bulgaria's heritage.

The book introduced me to a culture that thinks differently and lives differently yet dreams the same. It's a lesson for anyone.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A Bulgarian dreamer...
Review: I agree with R. D. Allison about the split-personality of the books. I think, though, that the author was trying to show how Dobry was growing up. In the beginning, he is satisfied with slow country life but gradually grows to realize his dream is to become an artist.

DOBRY is a good book for learning about the culture of Bulgarian peasants. It is rich in the folk stories--how God created man and Hadutzi-Dare saved the world--and everyday life of these people. Also, the author conveys the village's excitement when the massage bear (you'll learn what it is!) comes to herald the summer.

The language is beautiful and Dobry is an eternal optimist. The characters represent different facets of village life--for example, the rotund mayor explains government and Dobry's grandfather shows Bulgaria's heritage.

The book introduced me to a culture that thinks differently and lives differently yet dreams the same. It's a lesson for anyone.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Monica Shannon's story of a boy who wants to be a sculptor.
Review: This book for children is about a young boy living on a farm in Bulgaria in the 1920s or early 1930s. In a way it is a little unusual (at least it seemed that way to me) in that the first half of the book appeared to be written for 8 to 11 year-olds whereas the second half of the book, as the boy Dobry grows older and wishes to be a sculptor, seems to be written for an older child. But, the book won the 1935 Newbery Medal for best contribution to American children's literature, so I may be in the minority in my opinion.


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