![]() Skunk and Badger is a book you’ll want to read, reread, and read out loud. This beautifully bound edition contains both full-color plates and numerous black-and-white illustrations. New York Times bestselling author/illustrator and Caldecott Medalist Jon Klassen completes the book with his signature lushly textured art. Badger wants to collect more rocks and Skunk just wants a quiet Sunday. When I got a review invitation email from Algonquin, I accepted it because I wanted to be part of the next installment of Skunk and Badgers adventures. The conversations between Skunk And Badger were my favorite part of the story, and that ending was very heart warming. I listened to this on audiobook and the narrator did a great job with the different voices and weird sounds of the book. And why-oh-why are there so many chickens? “Nooooooooooooooooooooo!” Newbery Honor author Amy Timberlake spins the first tale in a series about two opposites who need to be friends. Skunk and Badger book 1 was good and I was waiting for book 2. Skunk and Badger is the first book in a middle grade series. ![]() When Skunk plows into Badger’s life, everything Badger knows is upended. But Skunk is Badger’s new roommate, and there is nothing Badger can do about it. ![]() Skunks should never, ever be allowed to move in. They should not linger in Important Rock Rooms. Wallace and Gromit meets Winnie-the-Pooh in a fresh take on a classic odd-couple friendship, from Newbery Honor author Amy Timberlake with full-color and black-and-white illustrations throughout by Caldecott Medalist Jon Klassen. ![]()
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