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I Am Too Absolutely Small for School (Charlie and Lola)

I Am Too Absolutely Small for School (Charlie and Lola)

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Author: Lauren Child
Publisher: Orchard
Category: Book

List Price: £5.99
Buy Used: £0.21
You Save: £5.78 (96%)



New (27) Used (18) from £0.21

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 7 reviews
Sales Rank: 19612

Media: Paperback
Pages: 32
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5
Dimensions (in): 10.6 x 9.6 x 0.2

ISBN: 1843623668
EAN: 9781843623663
ASIN: 1843623668

Publication Date: July 15, 2004
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
Condition: **UK SHIPPED**SWIFT RELIABLE SERVICE** With friendly customer care! "Buy with confidence, Buy Book EcoLOGICal" Used - Good

Also Available In:

  • Turtleback - I Am Too Absolutely Small for School
  • Hardcover - I Am Too Absolutely Small for School
  • Paperback - I Am Too Absolutely Small for School
  • Paperback - I am Too Absolutely Small for School (Charlie and Lola)
  • Library Binding - I Am Too Absolutely Small for School
  • Paperback - I Am Too Absolutely Small for School (Charlie & Lola)
  • Hardcover - I am Too Absolutely Small for School

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Customer Reviews:   Read 2 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars a great help!   September 9, 2008
vera jakovljevic (budleigh salterton)
My nearly four year old was getting really agitated at the idea of nursery school. She loves the fact that Lola shares in her stresses. Together they are starting a new world away from home. After each session at school she shouts that she loves school. phew!


4 out of 5 stars Shame about the 'schooliform'   February 19, 2008
Seren Ade (UK)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

This is a charming and entertaining entry in the 'Charlie and Lola' series, and one which has particular significance for preschool-age children in the run-up to starting at 'big school'. I first bought a copy of this title in 2005, when one of the preschoolers I work with was showing significant signs of distress about starting school. She really related to the story - which helped her to deal with her anxiety about the transition.

The story has been a big hit with subsequent 'generations' of nursery children, as Lola's doubts and fears reflect those of many school starters.

So why not a full 5 stars for a story that is well written and entertaining?

Unfortunately, unlike ALL of the primary schools in the rural area where I work (and many elsewhere), there is no school uniform at the school Lola will be joining, and her fears regarding same dress are totally unfounded because she will not have to wear a uniform ("schooliform").

Although Charlie points out that for schoolwear stripes are preferable to her crocodile costume, Lola's distaste for likeness of dress ultimately prevails and the story includes an image of children in uniform (Lola-clones) all dressed alike which is very negative.

If you're i) in an area, or ii) sending your child to a school where uniform is mandatory for primary schoolers, then it's up to the teacher/ reader to explain the positive (e.g. group identity) aspects of uniform.



4 out of 5 stars Super for nervous school beginners... shame about the stigmatised 'schooliform'   February 19, 2008
Seren Ade (UK)
2 out of 2 found this review helpful

This is a charming and entertaining entry in the 'Charlie and Lola' series, and one which has particular significance for preschool-age children in the run-up to starting at 'big school'. I first bought a copy of this title in 2005, when one of the preschoolers I work with was showing significant signs of distress about starting school. She really related to the story - which helped her to deal with her anxiety about the transition.

The story has been a big hit with subsequent 'generations' of nursery children, as Lola's doubts and fears reflect those of many school starters.

So why not a full 5 stars for a story that is well written and entertaining?

Unfortunately, unlike ALL of the primary schools in the rural area where I work (and many elsewhere), there is no school uniform at the school Lola will be joining, and her fears regarding same dress are totally unfounded because she will not have to wear a uniform ("schooliform").

Although Charlie points out that for schoolwear stripes are preferable to her crocodile costume, Lola's distaste for likeness of dress ultimately prevails and the story includes an image of children in uniform (Lola-clones) all dressed alike which is very negative.

If you're i) in an area, or ii) sending your child to a school where uniform is mandatory for primary schoolers, then it's up to the teacher/ reader to explain the positive (e.g. group identity) aspects of uniform.



5 out of 5 stars I love Charlie and Lola!   December 13, 2007
P. M. Fernandez (London)
1 out of 2 found this review helpful

There aren't many bad things about having more than one child. The prospect of repeated re-reads of the same stories that the last child has just grown out of (in our case, I guess it was probably the Usborne "Apple Tree Farm" books) is one minor negative.

However, Charlie and Lola appeared after the birth of our last child, and so we were able to add these books to our bookshelf. Lauren Child's illustrations are utterly charming, and the text captures the "special" spoken form of a cheeky pre-schooler ("I never have more than ten biscuits in one go.").

Lola's parents think she is ready for school - but she feels she is too busy. But as her brother takes her through some of the reasons that she ought to go to school, the real reason for her reluctance - apprehension - becomes apparent. So will she cope when she actually has to go?

Well, I hope it's not too much of a spoiler to say, of course she does! But this is an excellent book to share with a child who is about to start at school, and a bedtime book that can bear repeated re-reads.



5 out of 5 stars This book is too absolutely cute for words   May 10, 2007
International Cowgirl
8 out of 8 found this review helpful

Generally just on the right side of twee, the tremendously fashionable Lauren Child follows up picky eating and bedtime routines with the popular theme of starting school. This was back in the old days, before the TV show, when Child was still writing the stories herself. Now she just 'originates' them (and, for this parent at least, the idiosyncracies of language are starting to wear dangerously thin...)

Too Small for School is a lovely book, though. Once you get past that obligatory opening paragraph ('I have this little sister Lola...) which always makes my daughter roll her eyes in annoyance, it's a non-stop collage-fest with the usual wacky features. The Charlie and Lola books always encourage interaction - here there are photos of biscuits (for your child to choose their favourite), and numbered fingers and toes (bound to get most children counting their own)... even Japanese fridge magnets (that my daughter is thrilled to recognise from Mummy's half-baked attempts at learning the language). This book is cooler than cool.

It's frightfully middle class, of course, with Charlie and Lola attending a hip and happening school where there's no such thing as a 'schooliform' (not much help for all those children forced to wear regulation grey, of course). Lola's invisible friend Soren Lorenson makes an 'appearance' though (well, sort of) to great effect (with even a shadowy lunch box on his side of the table). It's this kind of cutesy touch that makes Lauren Child the star she is. On the downside, though, I was at a restaurant the other day, and they'd inserted a completely gratuitous 'absolutely' into the kids' menu (well, it was 'absolutley', actually, which is even worse). Lauren Child might just have a lot to answer for!


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