How the fox lost her tail, is a short, cute, simple story for children aged two to six. It’s about a fox and her two friends a wolf and a bear.
The book have beautiful illustrations that your child will love. It is a great book for a bedtime read and also a great tool for learning some of the wildlife. Can be a great first book read for a child who discover the magic of reading.
"While children may love the story, adults who have to read it to them, and children reading it for themselves may struggle with the unusual phrasing and poor English."
Reviewer: Reader for Bookangel.
This looks like a promising children's story from the outside. Unfortunately the great formatting, lovely illustrations and decent idea are let down by one fundamental thing. The English is readable but extremely poor. There are few typos, just bad grammar and a general lack of readability. An editor, proof reader, or beta reader should have spotted this and corrected it. In a book aimed at children of the age where they are learning to read, this is a very severe error.
The plot is very simple: bear, wolf, and fox are exiled from the forest, discover a pot of honey, and fox pulls a trick that loses her both her tail and her companions. It is familiar, reminding me of a blend of several traditional fairytales, like 'The Jar of Honey' and 'The Musicians of Bremen' among them.
While children will love the story, it is best read to them by adults who can correct the English. I can't understate this enough: this book is one editor away from a four star. As it is, even with the gorgeous artwork and excellent formatting, the ideal children's story and the nice ideas, this is a two at best.
While children may love the story, adults who have to read it to them, and children reading it for themselves may struggle with the unusual phrasing and poor English. Rating:2
I read this to my niece. It's a clever tale and teaches children a valuable lesson. I just corrected the language as I read aloud. I do that anyway for children's books, even when the author intended to use poor language. What's odd to me is that it appears the author put some money into the book, so why skimp on the editing?
I've done that so many times with my students Ellie Jane. I just read along to them, show the pictures and improvise when necessary. I shall have to get* How the Fox lost her Tail *and see why it's so confusing for myself.
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