The Three Questions by Jon J. Muth: Book Cover
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The Three Questions by Jon J. Muth (Illustrator), Leo Tolstoy

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(Hardcover)

  • Pub. Date: April 2002
  • 32pp
  • Sales Rank: 4,665

Reader Rating: (7 ratings)

Detailed Rating: "Writing" See All

FOR PARENTS

  • Age Range: 4 to 8
  • Reading Level from Lexile: AD410L 
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Product Details

  • Pub. Date: April 2002
  • Publisher: Scholastic, Inc.
  • Format: Hardcover, 32pp
  • Sales Rank: 4,665
  • Age Range: 4 to 8
  • Lexile: AD410L 

Synopsis

What is the best time to do things? Who is the most important one? What is the right thing to do? Nikolai knows that he wants to be the best person he can be, but often he is unsure if he is doing the right thing. So he goes to ask Leo, the wise turtle. When he arrives, the turtle is struggling to dig in his garden, and Nikolai rushes to help him. As he finishes work, a violent storm rolls in. Nikolai runs for Leo's cottage, but on his way, he hears cries for help from an injured panda. Nikolai brings her in from the cold, and then rushes back outside to rescue her baby too.

Annotation

Nikolai asks his animal friends to help him answer three important questions: "When is the best time to do things?" "Who is the most important?" and "What is the right thing to do?"

Publishers Weekly

Muth (Come On, Rain!) recasts a short story by Tolstoy into picture-book format, substituting a boy and his animal friends for the czar and his human companions. Yearning to be a good person, Nikolai asks, "When is the best time to do things? Who is the most important one? What is the right thing to do?" Sonya the heron, Gogol the monkey and Pushkin the dog offer their opinions, but their answers do not satisfy Nikolai. He visits Leo, an old turtle who lives in the mountains. While there, he helps Leo with his garden and rescues an injured panda and her cub, and in so doing, finds the answers he seeks. As Leo explains, "There is only one important time, and that time is now. The most important one is always the one you are with. And the most important thing is to do good for the one who is standing at your side." Moral without being moralistic, the tale sends a simple and direct message unfreighted by pomp or pedantry. Muth's art is as carefully distilled as his prose. A series of misty, evocative watercolors in muted tones suggests the figures and their changing relationships to the landscape. Judicious flashes of color quicken the compositions, as in the red of Nikolai's kite (the kite, released at the end, takes on symbolic value). An afterword describes Tolstoy and his work. Ages 6-up. (Apr.) Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.

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Absolutely one of the best!by Anonymous

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April 21, 2009: I love books that carry a powerful message in a simple way. This book is really for any age, child or adult. I choked up when I first read it to my daughter.

I had not read it before but heard about it at a leadership conference. Great inspirational book forby Anonymous

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March 31, 2009: I bought this for my daughter who is a high school English teacher. I thought it would help inspire her students. I thought she could use it along the lines of "Oh the places you will go".


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