It’s a very busy day in Ginger and Pickle’s shop, but Peter Rabbit has a game for everyone to play that will make time fly by. Based on the popular children’s game “Simon Says,” children will love playing along with their favorite Potter characters, and this unique format will keep them entertained time and time again. Features newly commissioned artwork, plus Beatrix Potter’s original art.
Helen Beatrix Potter was an English author, illustrator, mycologist, and conservationist who is best known for her children's books, which featured animal characters such as Peter Rabbit.
Born into a wealthy household, Potter was educated by governesses and grew up isolated from other children. She had numerous pets, and through holidays in Scotland and the Lake District, developed a love of landscape, flora, and fauna, all of which she closely observed and painted. Because she was a woman, her parents discouraged intellectual development, but her study and paintings of fungi led her to be widely respected in the field of mycology.
In her thirties, Potter published the highly successful children's book The Tale of Peter Rabbit and became secretly engaged to her publisher, Norman Warne, causing a breach with her parents, who disapproved of his social status. Warne died before the wedding.
Potter eventually published 24 children's books, the most recent being The Tale of Kitty-in-Boots (2016), and having become financially independent of her parents, was able to buy a farm in the Lake District, which she extended with other purchases over time.
In her forties, she married a local solicitor, William Heelis. She became a sheep breeder and farmer while continuing to write and illustrate children's books. Potter died in 1943 and left almost all of her property to The National Trust in order to preserve the beauty of the Lake District as she had known it, protecting it from developers.
Potter's books continue to sell well throughout the world, in multiple languages. Her stories have been retold in various formats, including a ballet, films, and in animation.
This is a cute book a fun take on a classic of Peter rabbit and it has a fun game in it a memory game which encourages children to memorize a list and repeated throughout the book.
It was fun to mingle with a crowd of Beatrix Potter characters, but I'm not convinced the text is at all hers (it's pretty lame) and the character illustrations are quite obviously lifted from other stories.