
The New York Times-bestselling Fly Guy series goes on an action-packed adventure by boat, train, plane, and beyond! Dad takes Fly Guy and Buzz for a car ride, but in a funny and wacky turn of events, Fly Guy is blown out of the car window and into a passing truck, where he lands in the driver's mouth! The driver spits him out, and Fly Guy tumbles onto a boat. Fly Guy then winds up on a circus trai……
这套书非常适合幼儿园和刚刚上小学的孩子们,也很适合初期学习英语的孩子。不仅故事本身有趣,每个人物还都有着大大的眼睛,笑眯眯的表情,很可爱。画面结构虽然简单,但是故事性很强。每句话基本上不超过5个简单的单词,朗读和孩子自己阅读都很合适。
"A pop-eyed, self-confident mite in Arnold's droll cartoon illustrations, Fly Guy's up to any challenge, whether it be eating a hot dog (well, most of it, anyway), or performing amazing aerial acrobatics; readers drawn by the flashy foil cover will stick around to applaud this unusually capable critter."
--Kirkus Reviews
"A boy goes out searching for a smart animal to take to The Amazing Pet Show and bumps into a fly that is intelligent enough to say the childs name, Buzz. Although his parents and the judges feel at first that a fly is only a pest, not a pet, the insect puts on a performance that astounds them all and wins an award. The cartoon illustrations showing characters with exaggerated wide eyes are delightful, but the text is somewhat weak and disjointed."
--Anne Knickerbocker, formerly at Cedar Brook Elementary School, Houston, TX
"A pop-eyed, self-confident mite in Arnold's droll cartoon
illustrations, Fly Guy's up to any challenge, whether it be eating
a hot dog (well, most of it, anyway), or performing amazing aerial
acrobatics; readers drawn by the flashy foil cover will stick
around to applaud this unusually capable critter."
--Kirkus Reviews
"A boy goes out searching for a smart animal to take to The
Amazing Pet Show and bumps into a fly that is intelligent enough to
say the childs name, Buzz. Although his parents and the judges feel
at first that a fly is only a pest, not a pet, the insect puts on a
performance that astounds them all and wins an award. The cartoon
illustrations showing characters with exaggerated wide eyes are
delightful, but the text is somewhat weak and disjointed."
--Anne Knickerbocker, formerly at Cedar Brook Elementary School,
Houston, TX