Book - Junket Is Nice

Book - Junket Is Nice

$17.00
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  Junket Is Nice, by Dorothy Kunhard One of the tragedies of progress is its casualties, like when book publishers stop publishing really good children’s books that don’t fit the contemporary formulas for success. Too few pictures, not enough whiz-bang, not colorful enough, or, in the case of Junket Is Nice, the story line is simply insane. Thankfully, Junket Is Nice remains in print thanks to the never-say-die folks at The New York Review Children’s Collection. Dorothy “Pat the Bunny” Kunhardt wrote it in the early ‘30s, at the onset of the Great Depression and the Dust Bowl. I won’t ruin it for you, but I can tell you, without ruining it, that it’s a short story, for kids maybe 1 to 90, about a strange old guy who loves his pudding-like junket so much that he seems to eat nothing else. Naturally, this concerns the locals, and the story takes off from there. It has a good ending. There are no page numbers; there is dialog without quotation marks; there is only one comma in the whole

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