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(Paperback - Reissue)
Average Customer Rating:
(19 ratings)
A restored edition of a classic, award-winning book about prejudice and understanding.
In winning a medal she is no longer there to receive, a tight-lipped little Polish girl teaches her classmates a lesson. Includes a note from the author's daughter, Helena Estes.
Classic titles return in time for the gift-giving season. For a new generation of readers, Eleanor Estes's long-treasured title, The Hundred Dresses (1944), illus. by Louis Slobodkin, appears in its 60th anniversary finery with newly "restored color" in the artwork. Wanda faces mockery at school, both because of her "funny" last name (Petron-ski) and her claims that she has 100 dresses at home even though she wears the same one to school each day. Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.
More Reviews and RecommendationsELEANOR ESTES (1906-1988), a children's librarian for many years, launched her writing career with the publication of The Moffats in 1941. Two of her books about the Moffats are Newbery Honor Books, as is The Hundred Dresses. She won the Newbery Medal for Ginger Pye in 1952.
LOUIS SLOBODKIN (1903-1975) illustrated more than ninety books for children, many of which he also wrote. Among his most enduring illustrations are those for the Moffats series by Eleanor Estes, and those for James Thurber's Many Moons, for which Slobodkin received the 1944 Caldecott Medal.
HELENA ESTES, the daughter of the author, is a children's librarian and a former bookseller. She lives in New Haven, Connecticut.
Number of Reviews: 19
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hundred dresses ROCKS
molly, someone who loves tall tale's!', 05/25/2008
I love The Hundred Dresses! The tale of the book is amazing. I would recommend this wonderful book.
Fond memories
lilrayosun, a writer for children's television, 01/14/2008
I read this book in fifth grade and adored it. Perhaps it was because my mother made all my clothes, and I was sometimes perceived by classmates as not being quite 'with it.' And while I'm not sure how well it would hold up in today's fast-paced world, I can attest to having read it at least five times in that fifth grade year. I'm glad to see it's still being published.
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