商家名称 | 信用等级 | 购买信息 | 订购本书 |
Deafo | |||
Deafo |
'A serious subject treated with warmth and humour.' Little London magazine "Full of warmth, humor, and superpowered strength, El Deafo is an absolute treat." Raina Telgemeier, author of Smile "Read El Deafo for the giggles, for the challenges, for the universal life experiences, and for the opportunity to be changed, even just a little. And for those readers who, like Cece, discover ways to turn the things the world calls weakness into the qualities they own as strengths, make sure to have a couple of capes on hand." Matthew C. Winner, The Busy Librarian 'It's an honest and rather sweet tale of a girl coming to terms with her disability, and as such the kind of story that will strike a chord with any child who has felt ostracised or different. El Deafo is heartfelt, eye-opening, funny and beautifully drawn.' The Financial Times 'Inspiring and honest, this is a wonderful graphic novel.' Book of the Week in We Love This Book and The Bookseller
作者简介Cece Bell is the illustrator of the successful Sock Monkey series from Candlewick and Crankee Doodle by her husband Tom Angleberger. She has a graduate degree in illustration and design from Kent State University. She is hearing impaired.
网友对Deafo的评论
漫画,正能量,一看再看。好!
Cece is my daughter and I am so very proud of her for baring her soul to write El Deafo. She worked 5 years to write and illustrate her graphic novel and it carries so many, many messages to everyone who reads it. I had hoped Cece would write this book ever since she started having her Sock Mobkey books published. I believe she is benefiting from her book-related travels and experiences as much as her readers benefit from her book. Thanks for askin'. Sincerely, A Proud Mama
I was diagnosed with a hearing loss at age 16. As an adult with a now severe hearing loss, I wanted to scream "YES!!!!" on just about every single page. I especially love that Cece is likable and not whiny about her situation. It shows how someone with hearing loss can feel stupid when it's not about stupidity at all.
I want my family to read this. I want my friends to read this. I want the whole world to read this!!!!! Cece's descriptions are dead on and this book is so important for those of us trying to live a normal life in a difficult situation. I'm forever grateful for El Deafo. And my friends, please keep the lights on and your face towards me. Thanks!
For teachers: Although I enjoyed the book and would recommend it, if you are thinking about doing this as a read aloud you will loose a lot because there is much that is translated through the pictures. Its like reading a comic strip. Also some of the content might be questionable for young readers. At a sleep over Cece is told to look down her shirt and spell A-T-T-I-C, kids make armpit farts, older sister is caught smoking and tells Cece not to tell mom, Cece can hear when her teacher is going to the bathroom, the word hell is used, teacher leaves the class without supervision to smoke in the teacher's room, etc.... I did like the book and I believe Cece's emotions are honest and children will be able to identify and relate to them but teachers should read it first before assigning it to students.
I'm not Graeme but I am his daughter. I got this book the day after I turned 10 and I was so excited to read it I read it as soon as I got home. I read more than half of the book in one day and didn't want to go to dinner because I read from 3:00 until 6:00. The next day I took the book to school and read it at silent reading time and I was so sad when silent reading was over because the book is so amazing. I read it in any spear time I had. I love love love this book! I am not much of a reader and don't really like it but this book is fantastic and because of it I like to read. I hope you see this Cece. You are such a strong girl and I feel so sorry for the bad times you had. Love Ruby
This was an incredibly sweet story that gets weakened by its own hook: A girl who loses her hearing at a young age comes to regard her hearing-aid as something that gives her super-powers and invents an imaginary superhero persona for herself. As a story of what it's like to grow up hearing-impaired, this book is fantastic. Heck, as a story of what it's like to grow up, *period*, this book is fantastic, and I admit I finished the book wishing I could tag along more into the protagonist's life. But what dragged on the book were her periods of fancy imagining herself to be the superhero "El Deafo" -- this was a very real element of the author's own childhood, so it couldn't have been left out, and it's even the foremost reason that I suspect people will buy the book (as was true for me). But I would have liked to see less superheroics and more personal growth. Overall, an excellent read.
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