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Ira says goodbye / Bernard Waber. [print]

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Boston : Houghton Mifflin, (c)1988.Description: 38 pages : illustrations ; 28 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9780395584132
Subject(s): LOC classification:
  • PZ7.W112.I737 1988
Online resources: Available additional physical forms:Read by Larry Robinson.Summary: Ira is surprised to discover that his best friend Reggie feels happy about having to move to a new town.
Item type: Juvenile Book (10-day checkout)
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode
Juvenile Book (10-day checkout) G. Allen Fleece Library Juvenile Collection - Second Floor Fiction PZ7.W334 .I73 1988 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 31923001689971

Read by Larry Robinson.

Ira is surprised to discover that his best friend Reggie feels happy about having to move to a new town.

Preschool. Kindergarten. Grade one. Grade two. Grade three. https://www.amazon.com/Ira-Says-Goodbye-Bernard-Waber/dp/0395584132/ref=sr_1_1?keywords=ira+says+goodbye&qid=1572636215&sr=8-1

Grades K-4 2.6 0.5 Quiz 29240 English fiction, vocabulary quiz available.

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Biography "This is Mr. Waber. Mr. Waber is the man who writes those stories about Lyle the Crocodile" is sometimes the way I am introduced to a child. We greet each other, the child and I, and I begin to imagine disappointment in the wide-eyed gaze. Perhaps there was an expectation the "real" Lyle would leap out from behind this not-unusual-looking author. It is tempting but I resist becoming Lyle and behaving in some ingratiating fashion to desperately compensate for the absent crocodile hero. I offer, instead, to show off some of my Lyle memorabilia, a collection acquired mostly through the generosity of good-humored friends and readers. My own early efforts at drawing were mostly confined to the laborious copying of photographs of film stars and other celebrities. I received respectable grade in art classes during my school years but doubt I thought it seriously indicated a career direction. Perhaps art seemed too frivolous for one raised during the Depression. Besides, I grew up a rather earnest young man and chose instead to major in finance at the University of Pennsylvania. After just one year of schooling, World War II interrupted those rather high-minded plans. Perhaps it was moving about, meeting people of various backgrounds and experience - I don't recall a precise moment-but somehow during those army days my interest shifted to drawing and painting. Returning to civilian life, I discarded high finance for enrollment at the Philadelphia College of Art. It was a decision I never regretted. During the four years I attended school I found great joy in painting and drawing. Soon after graduating, and newly married, Ethel and I moved to New York, a city we loved at once and still do. I celebrated that feeling with the eventual publication of The House on East 88th Street (1962). My first New York employment was in the promotion department of Condé Nast Publications, and although I continued in the magazine field for many years, writing and illustrating children's books was my primary interest since 1961. My involvement with children's books originated with some illustrations of children I carried in my art portfolio. Several art directors suggested that my drawings seemed suited for children's books. At the same time, I was also having read-aloud sessions with my own three children. I am afraid enthusiasm for "their" books began, in fact, to cause them occasional discomfort. "Daddy, why don't you look at the grownups' books" they chided. Before too long I was mailing out stories and ideas to publishers. Rejections followed but after a time a cheery encouragement arrived from Houghton Mifflin Company, and to my delight, a contract was offered for Lorenzo. In one way or another, I seem to find myself thinking of children's books most of the time. I even enjoy the period in between books for it is then (I hope) that I am susceptible to all manner of adventurous thought. I've never been good at thinking at the typewriter. I seem to write best when in motion. Trains, subways, even elevators seem to shake ideas loose in my head. Although I write and illustrate, I believe if I had to choose between the two, I would choose writing. There's a freedom about writing that appeals to me. You can do it almost anywhere-and I have. https://www.amazon.com/Ira-Says-Goodbye-Bernard-Waber/dp/0395584132/ref=sr_1_1?keywords=ira+says+goodbye&qid=1572636215&sr=8-1 Bernard Waber, American children's writer and illustrator (born Sept. 27, 1921, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania-died May 16, 2013, Baldwin, New York), created the story lines and illustrations for the endearing Lyle the Crocodile series of picture books, which spanned more than four decades, beginning with The House on East 88th Street (1962) and ending with Lyle Walks the Dogs (2010), which was illustrated by his daughter Paulis. Waber began his career as a commercial artist but was encouraged by co-workers to pursue his interest in juvenile artwork. His stories featuring Lyle provided life lessons on acceptance, forging relationships, and inclusion. Waber also infused anthropomorphic traits in other animals for fantasy adventures that included felines (A Lion Named Shirley Williamson (c)1996.), rodents (Do You See a Mouse? (c)1995. and The Mouse That Snored (c)2000.), and hippos (Evie and Margie (c)2003.). Other stories followed human characters coping with emotional upheaval, notably Ira Says Goodbye (1988) and Gina (1995), both of which dealt with the consequences of moving. Partly in response to the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks in the U.S., Waber wrote Courage (2002), a profile on bravery that exalted firefighters and police officers and suggested that having courage also extended to asking for help. Sales of Waber's more than 30 books exceeded 1.75 million copies. https://www.britannica.com/biography/Bernard-Waber

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