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Rating:  Summary: Relive childhood early reading memories! Review: As ever Scarry delivers a fine story book based on the growing child's everyday world brought the more to life by his inimical illustrations. Full of action and a well developed narrative which children from about 2 can follow verbally and trace with their finger across the page picture-by-picture, this is a book to truly delight adults and youngsters. If you remember Scarry from your own childhood, as many of you will, then those wide eyed smiling animal characters will immediately transport you back to 1968 (the date of the orginal book's publication). Note that this book is the abridged version, but loses nothing for that. We have a very bashed original and also Scarry's marvellous "366 Stories" - a story or poem for everyday of the year ( including Leap Years)...will they ever get round to publishing that great classic??? Enjoy "What Do People Do All Day" - the children will thank you for it in , oh, about 2028.
Rating:  Summary: Fabulous children's book Review: I had this book when I was very little and we read it as a bedtime story almost every night. The inner workings of factories and houses was fascinating to me, and I remember enjoying picking out my favorite characters on each page. Lowly Worm and Huckle Cat will always be my favorites.
Rating:  Summary: Great pictures needs a bit of updating Review: I, like many other readers, remember and enjoyed this book as a child. Now- with my own 3 year we are rediscovering the great pictures; the mechanics of how things work and are built and what people do all day. This is where I think it needs some updating. As a historic record for the 1950's, it might be accurate. But what takes me one tick down in the rating in re-reading this to my son is the overt sexist roles. There are precisely 3 careers allowed for women in this book- homemaker, nurse and secretary. I've taken to changing some of the gender of the workers to make it a bit more realistic- Don't get me wrong- the concept is great, the stories serve that purpose of how things work- and my son loves this book- I just get a bit tired trying not to perpetuate stereotpyes that didn't exist when I was a child in the 1960's (at least in my family).
Rating:  Summary: One of the best books of any kind Review: Like some other reviewers, I am disapointed the unabridged version is not available. But, even abridged, this is one of the funniest and most absorbing books in print. This book is full of delightful cutaways showing the internals of houses, streets, and factories. Like most Richard Scarry books, this one explores and explains a world which is fun, colorful, comprehensible, and full of well meaning people. Five stars is not enough.
Rating:  Summary: One of the best books of any kind Review: Like some other reviewers, I am disapointed the unabridged version is not available. But, even abridged, this is one of the funniest and most absorbing books in print. This book is full of delightful cutaways showing the internals of houses, streets, and factories. Like most Richard Scarry books, this one explores and explains a world which is fun, colorful, comprehensible, and full of well meaning people. Five stars is not enough.
Rating:  Summary: careers in Busytown examined Review: Set in Scarry's Busytown, this busy, colorful book is organized into eleven chapters that examine its citizens' jobs: Everyone is a worker; Building a new house; Mailing a letter; Firemen to the rescue; A visit to the hospital; The train trip; The story of seeds and how they grow; Wood and how we use it; Building a new road; A voyage on a ship; and, Where bread comes from. Effective use of color and cross-sections can be confusing for very young kids, but is informative and enjoyable for the curious, and the funny pictures appeal to all. Also, everything is labelled, which is very nice for beginning readers.
Rating:  Summary: Unfortunately it is abridged Review: This really is an excellent book, but if your memories are of the complete 96 page edition, you may be dissapointed in this 64 page abridged version. Losing about 1/3 of the excellent stories is a bit sad. Huckle's plane trip for example is not present. What is left is really excellent, but what was cut was great too.
Rating:  Summary: What Do People Do All Day Review: When I was a child my brother and I loved this book so much that it literally fell apart. I have been searching since my daughter was born for an unabridged copy of the book. Some of the sections that I loved as a child have been removed. My child is now 7 and I'm still looking.. I specifically remember the in depth descriptions of different proceses and jobs that were very easy to understand. I wish an unabridged printing with library binding would be made available...it would be a sell out!
Rating:  Summary: Best Children's Book Ever Review: Wish I could give this 10 stars. I discovered this book as a preschooler in 1968. My mom would take me to the local library every week. I checked it out from the library and I was hooked. I wanted to check it out at every visit, so my mom had the library order a copy for me. I remember even before I could read the words, I completely understood the story from the illustrations. I still have that original edition. It is tatered but still intact. I bought another copy this year for my preschool sons. They absolutely love it as well as the other Scarry book I had as a child, Busy Busy World. The newer book is the abridged edition. The abridged edition has 63 pages as compared to the ~95 pages in the original. They removed 4 stories from the original: busy (stay at home) mom, water treatment plants, electricity and how we get it, and Sgt. Murphy the Busytown policman. Why? Somebody at the publisher must have had a lobotomy. Anyway, we keep the original up in a closet to read only with adult supervision. The new one is on the shelf, readily accesible to the kids. This book (even the abridged edition) is an absolute classic.
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