Pepo and Lolo Are Friends by Ana Martín Larrañaga

24 p., Candlewick, 2004. Regardless of their differences and conflicts, friends can still be friends. Pepo, a pig, and Lolo, and chick, are friends. They like to do many of the same things, although sometimes one has better skills. Although they can become angry at each other, this never lasts long, because their friendship is more important. With its simple, expressive, colorful mixed-media illustrations, this story introduces important ideas about friendship to the youngest children. Ages 1-3
Share:

No comments:

Post a Comment

Featured post

The Five Stages of Interviewing Offshore Software Engineers

The following describes a few techniques that I use when interviewing applicants for Software Engineering positions in offshore locations. I...

Tags

ADHD (5) adoption (8) African (3) African American (10) AIDS (1) Alzheimer's disease (1) anger (1) apology (1) art (2) Asian (1) Asian American (3) asthma (1) autism (1) baby (5) bad day (1) bedtime (4) being little (3) blended family (2) bully (4) cat (2) cerebral palsy (2) change (1) chronic illness (1) competition (2) crying (1) dance (1) deafness (2) death of a person (9) death of a pet (1) dementia (2) developmental disability (1) disability (7) disability of another (1) disaster (5) divorce (1) doctor (2) dog (3) earthquake (2) embarrassment (2) ethnicity (1) European (7) European American (58) families (2) fear (7) feelings (2) first grade (1) friend moves away (2) friendship (21) fussy eater (2) gender (4) getting lost (1) grandfather (7) grandmother (7) guilt (1) homework (1) hugs (2) hurricane (3) imagination (11) immigration (3) Indian American (1) inflexibility (1) interview (1) kindergarten (1) Korean American (1) Latino (8) losing a tooth (1) lying (1) medication (2) Mexican American (1) military family (2) minor illness (2) monsters (2) mother (2) moving house (3) multicultural (54) music (1) non-human (45) oppositionality (1) organization (2) perfectionism (2) persistence (2) potty learning (1) prejudice (11) preschool (1) reading (1) resilient sense of self (10) same-sex parents (4) schoolwork (1) security in relationship (7) separation (7) serious illness of another person (7) shyness (2) sibling (1) sibling relationships (2) slavery (1) Spanish (1) speech (1) starting school (3) stuttering (1) teasing (2) test anxiety (1) therapy (4) vegetables (1) war (2) worry (4) yoga (1)