About this item
Highlights
- In the third volume of this critically acclaimed series, Mousse learns during a visit from his niece that some treasures are truly priceless.Mousse has meticulously prepared for his niece Pistachio's arrival.
- 4-10 Years
- 7.48" x 4.88" Hardcover
- 37 Pages
- Juvenile Fiction, Animals
- Series Name: Mousse
Description
Book Synopsis
In the third volume of this critically acclaimed series, Mousse learns during a visit from his niece that some treasures are truly priceless.
Mousse has meticulously prepared for his niece Pistachio's arrival. He's gone to the bakery to buy fresh bread and cheese. In her room, he's set out a fresh notebook, with pens and colored pencils, and put together a small library with his favorite books. But Pistachio has plans of her own: she only wants to play in the waves.
When Mousse receives a letter from his friend Barnacle about a rummage sale, he and Pistachio rush to the attic to prepare, stumbling upon the treasures hidden in his old house. What memories do they hold?
Review Quotes
Praise for How Dreadful!:
"An unmitigated delight." --Bruce Handy, The New York Times
About the Author
After studying at the School of Decorative Arts in Strasbourg, Claire Lebourg now lives and works in Rennes. Since then, she has published several picture books, including How Dreadful! and Like This, and an early reading series Mousse. In addition to her work as an author-illustrator, she creates maps and posters and organizes talks and workshops for children and adults.
Sophie Lewis has translated works from French and Portuguese by Stendhal, Jules Verne, Marcel Aymé, Violette Leduc, Leïla Slimani, Mona Chollet and Annie Ernaux, as well as Natalia Borges Polesso, João Gilberto Noll, Sheyla Smanioto, Victor Heringer and Patrícia Melo, among others. With Gitanjali Patel, she co-founded the Shadow Heroes workshops enterprise. Lewis's translations have been shortlisted for the Scott Moncrieff and Republic of Consciousness prizes, and longlisted for the International Booker Prize. She was joint winner of the 2022 French-American Foundation prize for non-fiction translation, for Nastassja Martin's In the Eye of the Wild.