Celebrate Easter with a hilarious holiday adventure starring the crayons from the #1 New York Times bestseller The Day the Crayons Quit !
Easter is the perfect holiday for crayons! They get to learn new shapes and decorate one giant egg together...but where will they hide it?! Blue Crayon has some ideas...
In a gift book perfectly sized for Easter baskets, this story is sure to make kids — and grown-ups — giggle as they celebrate the holiday together.
Ever since his childhood in one of Ohio’s most haunted houses, writer director Drew Daywalt has been writing escapist fantasy and building worlds of his own. With a degree in Creative Writing, and a concentration in Children’s Literature from Emerson College in Boston, Daywalt set off to Hollywood where he spent years writing for Disney and Universal on such beloved shows as Timon & Pumba, Buzz Lightyear, and Woody Woodpecker, and where his animated series The Wacky World of Tex Avery garnered an Emmy nomination.
His first trip into live action landed him studio screenwriting and feature film directing work with such Hollywood luminaries as Quentin Tarrantino, Lawrence Bender, Tony Scott, Brett Ratner and Jerry Bruckheimer.
With an eye toward picture book writing, Daywalt’s first book THE DAY THE CRAYONS QUIT, illustrated by Oliver Jeffers, debuted on the New York Times Best Seller’s List in June 2013, and has since become a Number One Best Seller.
Another instalment in this popular series! Children love the crayons and while it is a simple story, it does evoke the imagination and critical and creative thinking. As an educator, there are lots of fun applications that can be made from this book and a fun way to tie in with Easter activities.
This is one of the most fun Easter stories I have read, most holiday stories are dull or gimmicky, but not Drew Daywalt's books. The crayons decorate different shapes for Easter, but none of the shapes look like an egg, how will they celebrate Easter. I love the different personalities of the crayons, including the yellow and orange crayons who both insist that they are the color of the sun, the green crayon who calls himself Esteben, and the white crayon who continues to be annoyed that no one can tell if he has colored the paper. Oliver Jeffers' illustrations have so much charm and personality too.
First sentence: The crayons are getting ready for Easter. Red crayon decorates a circle. Orange crayon decorates a square. Yellow crayon decorates a triangle.
Premise/plot: Are the crayons really getting ready for Easter? One crayon seems to cast doubt on the situation. None of the crayons are decorating/coloring eggs. Every crayon has his/her own shape that they've colored/decorated. (Rhombus. Triangle. Star.)
My thoughts: I don't mind this series. But some of the books in the series are just filler. (Just being honest.) If you have a little one that absolutely loves this series above all others, then this might be worth your money. It's not a bad read, just an unnecessary one.
Ha Ha Ha! Another fun one from the Crayons that my little school friends can use to learn their shape and also be artistically creative before the Easter holidays. Will have to tell my teaching friends, for an easy Easter literacy/math crossover project.
Love the quirky homages to previous stories and to the individualities of each crayon character.
There's another literacy opener . . . - an opportunity for my older school friends to create a back story for Tea Green (Esteban) too.
Jeg elsker disse bøkene. Gleder meg til å shoppe alle, og når alle er i hus er jeg sikker på at jeg har ett halvt år planlagt i engelskundervisning på småtrinnet skinnende forran meg. De bader oss i begreper, de gir oss tips til noe å skrive og tegne op, de gir oss motivasjon til å lage egne historier.
I loved this book and each of the crayon's different personalities. I thought that each crayons coloring their shape and then working together to decorate an egg was wonderful and I actually chuckled at the end. This is a nice little Easter story that helps children with colors & shapes. Paired with some simple illustrations that seem to work well with the story.
In this board book, the crayons are all colouring different shapes but none of the shapes are eggs! Features the crayons' typical humour (White, did you even colour your shape?) and as we're working through the series, I liked that Pea Green is still referring to himself as Esteban.
Okay, this was just super cute! Purple crayon is frustrated that no one seems to be painting eggs but the other crayons have a plan. And while they color, the kids learn about SHAPES! Nice sneaky education dropped into this cute holiday book haha
It's cute, especially if you are familiar with Daywalts original crayon book "The day the Crayons quit". It goes through various colors and each crayon is doing a different thing.
Brief summary: The crayons prepare for Easter by making various shapes to paste onto an egg. This small picture book(5.88 x 0.36 x 7.13 inches) could fit inside an Easter basket.
I love it because they all made different shapes so they were all good for getting ready for Easter. It was good because all the crayons were making all different shapes. -S, age 7