Five Children and It (Junior Classics) - Books (E. Nesbit, Audio CD)
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- Sales Rank:
- 38730
- Author:
- E. Nesbit
- Binding:
- Audio CD
- ISBN:
- 9626343052
- Number of Pages:
- Publication Date:
- 19th March 2004
- Publisher:
- Naxos AudioBooks
- Also Available:
-
Five Children and it (Junior Classics) (Audio Cassette)
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Customer Reviews of Five Children and It (Junior Classics)
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thegoodbook
Sevenoaks, UK
5th March 2008
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Not as good as the puffin audio - pity...
Yes, a great story, but to manage your expectations, this is not a patch on the Puffin tapes of the book read by Samantha Bond. This abridgement lacks colour compared with the Puffin one - you jump to the Psammead after about 3 minutes, and a lot of the Edwardian charm has been dropped. Anna Bentinck is just not as good either. But as this is the only audio available, I suppose you'll have to get it! -
earlyyearsbooks
10th May 2005
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Wonderful - both my children love this CD version
My six year old daughter says "It is the most best CD ever!" My 8 year old son says "It's better than watching the film, my heart broke at the end! I'm going to listen to it over and over again"Need I say more, the children love it!
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A. Craig
London United Kingdom
4th May 2004
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best recording yet - ignore the cover
What a pity this recording comes with such a wishy-washy illustration, guaranteed to put children off. It is pure joy, not least because it will keep any child of 8+ completely quiet for 3 hours. Nesbitt's classic tale is being filmed, and perhaps this will encourage more children ot try her wonderful stories, told in the voice of the kindest mother imaginable.
Five children- one of the a baby, known as the Lamb (whose delightful and frightful characteristics are honestly portrayed) leave London for their first holiday in two years at the white house in the country. It isn't long before they discover a "Psammead" in the gravel-pits, a sand-fairy who has not surfaced since dinosaur days (Nesbitt's paleontology a bit shaky here) when children used to ask it for a nice Megatherium for breakfast. Our own children of course ask for all the obvious things - beauty, riches, wings, adventures. They all go hilariously wrong, and if the long-suffering maid Ellen gets a husband out of it, it's only by accident.
There are no tedious moral messages, except perhaps that it isn't wise to try and tell adults the truth, and that you should always have your dinner before you have an adventure, but the freshness of this enchanting book is undimmed. The reading is first-rate, and interspersed with perfectly chosen music from Naxos's archives. Much, much better than the BBC recording. I also recommend the Cover to Cover audiop version of The Phoenix & the Carpet. Let's hope the third book in the trilogy, The Sotry of the Amulet, isn't long in appearing.






