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Books to read if you're planning a vacation in "Henry", sorted by average review score:

Henry and Mudge and the Best Day of All
Published in Hardcover by Recorded Books Unabridged (December, 1997)
Author: Cynthia Rylant
Average review score:

A Great Series for the Only Child
This long and growing series is terrific for all kids, but especially only children. Although Henry has no siblings and his best friends are his dog Mudge and his cousin Annie (also an only, apparently in a one-parent household), with the exception of the first book, the series does not dwell on his sibling-free status. It simply presents a well-adjusted kid enjoying a wide range activities. Henry is constructive with his time (but not so much as to be unrealistic; see "Henry and Mudge and the Long Weekend"), sociable, not prone to loneliness and never portrayed as pining for a little brother or sister. As the parent of an "only", I find the whole series great for subtly conveying an affirmative message without beating it over the head.
To be sure, Henry's is a somewhat idealized, white-kid, small-town life and the books are not entirely p.c. - the illustrations of the family car never seem to picture seat belts and Henry's diet apparently includes lots of hot dogs, potato chips and refined sugar. But as part of a wider reading program, Henry and Mudge provide a great series of simple chapter books to be read to youngsters or read by beginning readers.

What a party!
My children love this book. My 2 year old wanted this for hisbedtime story every night for 2 weeks. It is still one of hisfavorites. His 4 year old sister loves all of the Henry & Mudge books, but she especially loves this one. She keeps asking if we can have a pinata at her party. I like it because it is short enough for the whole book to be a bedtime story.


Henry and Mudge and the Long Weekend
Published in Hardcover by Live Oak Media (January, 2001)
Authors: Cynthia Rylant, Sucie Stevenson, and John Beach
Average review score:

2nd Graders in Lockport LOVE the Henry and Mudge stories!
Our names are Luisa, Casey, Tom, Joshua, Tim, Megan, Alex, and Janae. We read Henry and Mudge and the Long Weekend. Here is our summary of the book: Henry and Mudge got up one Saturday Morning in February and looked outside. The weather was disgusting. They couldn't go outside and there was nothing to do. Everything was boring to Henry and Mudge. They were so bored that Henry and Mudge went to sleep on the couch with Dad. Henry's mother had the idea to make a castle out of the big refrigerator and stove boxes. Henry, Mom, and Dad started making the castle. Mom drew, Dad cut, Henry stapled, and Mudge chewed an old boot. The family woke up the next morning and started to work on the castle. Mom read the newspaper and drank coffee. Henry and his father finished the castle. They showed it to Mom. It looked nice. It looked like a real castle. Mom, Dad, Henry, and Mudge had a good weekend!

This is a great book!
I love the story line. A family working together on a yukky weekend minus the TV to do something fun. I esp. loved the picture of mom sitting at the table reading the paper while dad and son were building the castle in the basement. My kindergartener loved it! We will definitely read more of these books!


Henry and Mudge Get the Cold Shivers
Published in Hardcover by Live Oak Media (September, 1999)
Authors: Cynthia Rylant, Sucie Stevenson, and John Beach
Average review score:

You Got Me in a Cold, Cold, Sweat!
Our five-year old loves the Henry and Mudge series, and this is a fine example of its appeal. When Henry gets sick, he and Mudge share popsicles and crackers (well, Mudge gets the crackers; he gets the popsicles). But then, Mudge awakes and seems strangely subdued.

The family takes him to the vet, where, in one of the funnier scenes, the anxious dog sheds all over the waiting room. The happy ending, simple yet interesting structure, and depiction of a boy and dog's mutual love make for an entertaining book for young children. Repetition of some words and satisfying pictures tied to the story will help the new reader.

Fun!
Mudge is a personal favorite of my 8 year old son (a reluctant reader). The love Henry has for his drooling dog, Mudge is sweet. In this book, Henry gets a cold and must stay in bed doing puzzles, reading books and eating crackers. By the end of the book Henry has recovered but alas, Mudge has caught Henry's cold and no longer feels well enough to share crackers with Henry. Short chapters with a controlled vocabulary. We enjoy the adorable pictures.


Henry and Mudge Take the Big Test
Published in Library Binding by Bt Bound (October, 1999)
Authors: Cynthia Rylant and Sucie Stevenson
Average review score:

School Days for Mudge
This is a very fun book with wonderful pictures drawn in pen and ink and watercolor. After seeing a very obedient dog walk by his house, Henry and his mom decide it might be a good idea to take Mudge--their big, slightly wild and sloppy dog--to obedience school. Henry is worried: "He thought Mudge might drool on the teacher's foot. Or sit on a poodle by mistake. Or not even stay awake long enough to do anything."

The book is funny and teaches kids some fundamentals about training dogs. If Mudge can do it, maybe your dog can do it too!
The book is rated at "level 2--reading with help" by the publisher, and it has enough repetition and short sentences for the beginning reader. However, the humor and great picture make an interesting as well as readable book!

Mudge goes to school
Henry takes his loveable, unruly dog to obedience school. Henry is terribly nervous. Will Mudge sit on a puddle? Will he drool on the teacher's foot? Mudge might flunk dog school! At the end of the eight weeks Mudge and Henry must take the "Big Test". Henry and Mudge are top choice for my 8 year old son who is a reluctant reader. Mudge has definitely found a place in his heart! Short chapters, adorable pictures and funny story make this book a hit!


Henry Goes West
Published in Paperback by Random House (Merchandising) (September, 1988)
Author: Robert M. Quackenbush
Average review score:

Henry Goes West
This book was one of four available to my two year old as we waited in the hospital Emergency Room (she needed two stitches.) After reading all the books once, she wanted to hear "Henry" over and over. We successfully made it through the TWO HOUR wait thanks to this wonderful story.

A good book
My boys love this book. A good book for the preschool/young reader group


The Henry Gregor Felsen Collection (Gr. 9-12)
Published in Paperback by G P Publishing (June, 1990)
Author: Henry G. Felsen
Average review score:

This is the stuff of Beach Boys singles!
Remember when a Beach Boys 45 had a surfing song on one side and a hot rod song on the other? Not to mention Jan & Dean? This was my generation--it was for us that Lee Iacocca later invented the Ford Mustang. Just picture if any of these guys was also an author, and you've got Henry Gregor Felsen. These stories are cautionary without being moralistic. They reminded us of the hazards of irresponsible driving, while avoiding condemning us in the manner of movies as "Hot Rods To Hell" and "Because They're Young". They represented an understanding, nurturing side of our WW II generation parents, who all too often seemed as if they hated and feared their own children. These books represented us as real people. Today we drive Tauruses, Luminas and minivans. It is our dog-eared copies of Felsen books, with the Beach Boys and Jan & Dean as a soundtrack, which take us back to our Deuce Coupe days. In his way, Felsen was the Mark Twain of Dead Man's Curve. Damn, I with they'd put these books back in print!

1950's teen car culture in a small Iowa town
This collector's edition of six Henry Gregor Felsen novels for teens mixes in just the right proportions of teenage alienation, fascination with automobiles, danger, and morality to deliver a well-placed message to teen readers of the 1950's. A must for anyone who ever sipped iced tea on a screened-in porch with the prettiest girl in town by day and drove hard and fast on dangerous dirt county roads by night. Titles include: Hot Rod, Fever Heat, Street Rod, Rag Top, Crash Club, and Road Rocket. Classic hotrod cover art by Ken Eberts, Rich Boyd, Jack Juratovic, Steve Pasteiner, Bill Neale, and Bruce Kaiser.


Henry Hobson Richardson: A Genius for Architecture
Published in Hardcover by The Monacelli Press (February, 1998)
Authors: Margaret Henderson Floyd and Paul Rocheleau
Average review score:

FINALLY----a long, gorgeous, color-photo Richardson book!!
This is just the kind of big, sumptuous, exhaustive book that Richardson has always deserved. Part coffee-table book, part monograph----entertaining, informative, great to look through. I grew up near Boston and Richardson's churches, train depots, and libraries were a part of the background until I took a close look at Trinity Church and realized that the same person who designed THAT designed all these other structures as well. Richardson not only revived Romanesque architecture but pointed the way to modernism. He was a pivotal figure who didn't live long enough. This well-produced book does him justice.

Quintessential Richardson
Anyone interested in Romanesque architecture and American architecture would be interested in this book. The quality of the images are outstanding as is the text. The book describes Richardson's complete artistic career and his numerous buildings in New England, Chicago, and throughout the U.S.


Henry Miller on Writing
Published in Paperback by New Directions Publishing (June, 1964)
Authors: Henry Miller and Thomas H. Moore
Average review score:

Exceptional.
An especially important book for any aspiring writers or students of fiction or the creative mind. Henry Miller on Writing shows Miller as he struggles to learn how to write and questions and wrestles with all the insecurities and self-loathing that is endemic to writing. As important as John Gardner's books on writing, only more readable and more fun.

Henry knows writing
For anyone who hasn't read Miller, this is a great introduction. As always, Miller's work is permeated with joy and lustfull arrogance. He is truly in love with life- and as writers go, a great and unique participant. Henry Miller on Writing provides glimpses into his work and the nature and derivitive of his own inspiration. The book will thrill the adventurer and offend the weak-minded. You will love or hate Miller.


Henry Miller: The Paris Years
Published in Paperback by Arcade Publishing (November, 1996)
Authors: Brassai and Timothy Bent
Average review score:

Getting to Know Henry
Although Miller's books are largely autobiographical, it is sometimes difficult to discern "Henry Miller" from "Henry Miller's world". In reading this book by Brassai, we learn some of the methods Miller used to construct his world-- thus providing a deeper understanding of the man. While this book is by no means exhaustive, it does provide a glimpse into the man. There are numerous descriptions of Henry Miller available, but to get an insider's view, it is essential to read this book written by a man who knew Miller as well as any person can know another.

Henry Miller as few knew him...
This book is a must-read for Henry Miller devotees who want to understand the genesis of this great writer. Written by his close friend Brassai a fascinating story is told about Miller's down and out days in Paris during the 1930's and how his vision of writing developed. It is replete with personal anecdotes about Miller's views of Paris, his hatred (ambivalent as it was) of his homeland and his relations with the women in his life. It more than anything shows Miller as the writer refusing to sell-out by having the essence of his writing edited away by the censorius literary status quo of his day.


Henry Moore Writings and Conversations (Documents of Twentieth-Century Art)
Published in Paperback by University of California Press (April, 2002)
Authors: Henry Moore, Alan G. Wilkinson, and Alan Bowness
Average review score:

A must read for any Moore enthusiast
Editor Alan Wilkinson was a close friend of Henry Moore, and it shows in the care he put into editing this book. Other than the introduction, entitled "Perfect Symmetry is Death", Wilkinson allowed Moore to speak for himself by drawing from the man's own words, through interviews, articles, letters, and even scribblings in his notebooks.

The chapters are arranged under the following headings: "Ch. 1: Life and Influences", "Ch. 2: Friends and Colleagues", "Ch. 3: Art and Artists", "Ch. 4: On Sculpture", and "Ch. 5: Works by Henry Moore". Bibliographical sources, list of Moore's most well known work, and a general keyword index can be found in the back.

Because interviews Moore gave in 1973 might refer to events from his childhood, Wilkinson took care to put as much of the artist's words into context by surrounding it with other relevant quotations. For example, on page 35, the passage that begins with "In Castleford, where I was born, there are what called sand holes. They're caves where the sand has been excavated" (1973) is followed by "What is a cave? A cave is a shape. It's not the lump of mountain over it" (1962).

With a foreword by Alan Bowness. Overall, a very compelling read.

Don't pass by!
The best book available for all Moore fans and those who want to be...


Related Vacation Book Subjects: Tennessee
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