I threw away the cookies stolen by the mouse, so will it be okay for me to eat other cookies?
A little mouse wearing jeans and carrying a small green schoolbag approached a little boy sitting in the yard eating cookies and reading a picture book. What would happen if he gave the mouse a biscuit at this time? If you treat the mouse to cookies, it will ask you for a glass of milk. If you give him milk, he will definitely ask you for a straw. After drinking milk, he will ask for a towel. After wiping his mouth, he will look in the mirror to see if there is a moustache on his mouth. As soon as he looks in the mirror, he will say that his hair needs to be cut. He will definitely ask you for a pair of scissors to cut his nails. When he cuts his hair, he will ask for a broom to sweep the floor. He will sweep the floor carefully, sweeping harder and harder, sweeping all the rooms and mopping the floor hard. When he's done, he'll definitely want to sleep. You must give him a small box as a crib, pillow and quilt. He will climb into his bed and see how to lie comfortably. He will pat his little pillow loose again and again. He is sure to let you read a story. You read him a picture book of yours that he wants, and he will let you show him the illustrations. When he is happy with the illustration, he will say that he wants to draw one, too. He will ask you for paper and crayons. He will draw a picture carefully. After painting, he will ask you for a pen if he wants to sign it. After signing, he will say that he will hang his photo on your refrigerator. He means please help him find scotch tape. When he hangs the picture, he will step back and stand and admire it. When he looks at the refrigerator, he will remember that he is a little thirsty. Of course, he will ask you for a glass of milk. As long as he wants milk, he will definitely want a biscuit so that he can eat it with milk. About the author: Laura Qiao Fei Numanlov 1953 was born in Brooklyn, New York, USA. Her father is Art editor of a famous newspaper in new york, and her mother is a junior high school teacher. She grew up in an atmosphere of art, music and books. At the age of 9, she began to write stories, draw illustrations and even make covers with the publisher's name on them. /kloc-at the age of 0/5, influenced by her second sister Emily, she wanted to be a fashion designer, so she entered Placke College in Brooklyn, but she soon got tired of fashion design courses. Last school year, she decided to take a course on how to create picture books for children. She immediately fell in love with this course, wrote her first book and even successfully signed the first publishing contract! From then on, she began to write for children and published 16 books, including the best-selling series "If You Give One ……", which gained a high reputation in the publishing industry and became one of children's favorite works. Introduction: There is a famous TV education program in America called Reading Rainbow. Choose some books with special creativity to introduce to children, and the introduction method is also very creative, so they are deeply loved by children and adults. The program "Reading Rainbow" made a special issue of "If you give a mouse a biscuit". Its instruction is as follows: the host first takes everyone to visit a bowling alley. After pitching, the camera lens makes a short trip with the ball, hits the striker along the fairway, enters the conveying system in the background, and finally the ball rolls back to the luggage rack in the front desk. This little trip intuitively showed us a common phenomenon, that is, events often happen one after another, and the previous events have some connection with the subsequent events. This happens to be an important message if you give mice cookies. In that TV program, the host even showed the children around the operation of the bowling factory. Of course, it will be boring to interpret this book only by context and causality. The children are obsessed with this extremely simple and interesting story for their own reasons. Logically similar to the old story "Once upon a time there was a mountain and there was a temple in the mountain", it can be told repeatedly. But its details are richer, and the roles of children and adults have been subtly changed. Young readers see themselves from mice, while big readers see themselves from children. This is a book that can be used to play all kinds of games. At least you can play a game that imitates storytelling and story solitaire. The rule is simple: at the end of the story, you must go back to the beginning of the story. Children are fascinated by this. Writers and painters are fascinated by this kind of game. They create one game after another: if you give moose muffins, if you give pig pancakes, if you take mice to school. Peng Yi, a writer and theorist of children's literature, has a detailed introduction in the forthcoming book Picture Book: Reading and Classics. The contents are as follows: Introduction: A little mouse wearing suspenders jeans and carrying a small green schoolbag approached a little boy sitting in the yard eating cookies and reading a picture book. What would happen if he gave the mouse a biscuit at this time? If you treat the mouse to cookies, it will ask you for a glass of milk. If you give him milk, he will definitely ask you for a straw. After drinking milk, he will ask for a towel. After wiping his mouth, he will look in the mirror to see if there is a moustache on his mouth. As soon as he looks in the mirror, he will say that his hair needs to be cut. He will definitely ask you for a pair of scissors to cut his nails. When he cuts his hair, he will ask for a broom to sweep the floor. He will sweep the floor carefully, sweeping harder and harder, sweeping all the rooms and mopping the floor hard. When he's done, he'll definitely want to sleep. You must give him a small box as a crib, pillow and quilt. He will climb into his bed and see how to lie comfortably. He will pat his little pillow loose again and again. He is sure to let you read a story. You read him a picture book of yours that he wants, and he will let you show him the illustrations. When he is happy with the illustration, he will say that he wants to draw one, too. He will ask you for paper and crayons. He will draw a picture carefully. After painting, he will ask you for a pen if he wants to sign it. After signing, he will say that he will hang his photo on your refrigerator. He means please help him find scotch tape. When he hangs the picture, he will step back and stand and admire it. When he looks at the refrigerator, he will remember that he is a little thirsty. Of course, he will ask you for a glass of milk. As long as he wants milk, he will definitely want a biscuit so that he can eat it with milk. The classic book If You Give a Mouse a Biscuit is very popular with children. Otherwise, Laura Qiao Fei Numanlov and Felicia Bond, the golden partners, will not release the sequels If You Give a Moose a Muffin and If You Give a Pig a Pancake again. "If you give a ..." The series is very intense, no wonder some people exclaim: "If you give a mouse a biscuit" has become a cultural phenomenon! "Children are its fanatical fans. An American mother generously gave this book five stars on Amazon. Com and left a message: "My 17-month-old son found this book from his pile of books. Whenever I try to give him other books to make him compromise, he always protests. He loves this story so much that he knows when to turn to the next page. It is irreplaceable. I used to hide it so that I could read him a new book, but he always found it and took it downstairs, insisting that I put everything down and remember what his favorite story was. "Why do children like it so much? First of all, the story "If you give it to a ..." written by Laura Qiao Fei Numanlov is so interesting. In fact, the little boy in the book just gave the little mouse a biscuit, but who would have thought that the domino would be knocked down! This rodent in baggy jeans is really pushing his luck. If you give him a biscuit, he will ask for a glass of milk. You give him a glass of milk, and he wants a straw ... so, the circle begins to go on endlessly, and the trouble comes, and you can't get rid of him anymore. Finally, the house was in a mess and turned into a messy garbage dump. The energetic little boy was finally exhausted and fell asleep by the mouse who was more energetic than him, while the mouse was eating biscuits in high spirits. I came back after a long walk. In this book, causality is really like a domino, and a biscuit is both the end and the beginning of the story. Wow, the terrible scene will be repeated again, which is terrible! Children will giggle and pester adults to reread this page because they know what the mouse is going to say. Children like mice, a little troublemaker who never stops. They prefer to see boys fooled by mice. I just don't know if they will see the shadow of their parents in the boy. However, their parents will definitely see the child's shadow from this little mouse. Let's look at Felicia Bond's illustrations again. Some people describe her as enthusiastic when drawing illustrations. Indeed, she used simple pictures of color and pen drawing to make the story more nonsense and funny-you see, when the mouse said that he would cut his hair with small scissors, there was only one short hair on his head, and on the next page, he clicked off so much hair in front of the mirror! Also, the mouse dragged the broom and swept out piles of dust as high as small sand dunes from the floor! Look at the picture of a family holding hands drawn by the mouse. How fashionable his mother and sisters are dressed ... Felicia Bond really brought this naughty, active and impatient little mouse to life. Tell me, how can children not like such an interesting book? Laura Qiao Fei Numanlov said that the book was inspired by a long-distance bus trip that made her sleepy. She said she was so bored that she imagined that animals were eating her favorite food. First an orangutan is eating pizza, then a zebra is eating watermelon, and then a little mouse is eating chocolate biscuits! But I'm afraid no one would have thought that her story was rejected by nine publishers before it was bought by Harper Collins Press. Because this book uses the sentence "If you give ……", someone has designed the following methods to extend reading-using the structure of the story. After reading the first few pages, pause and let the children guess what will happen next. When reading for the second time, he or she reads the words aloud before turning the page. ● Let your children make up stories according to the chain reaction. At the beginning of the story, you can say, "If you give _ _ _ ………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… Make cookies for your little mouse!