The Adventures of Peter Cottontail (Dover Children's Thrift Classics)

$4.99

Brief Description:
Unhappy with his name and his house, Peter Rabbit learns to appreciate himself and his world with the help of his friends.

Marc Notes:
Reprint. Originally published: Boston: Little, Brown, and Co., 1914.;Unhappy with his name and his house, Peter Rabbit learns to appreciate himself and his world with the help of his friends.;Published in association with the Thornton W. Burgess Museum and the Green Briar Nature Center, Sandwich, Massachusetts..

Biographical Note:
Author and conservationist Thornton W. Burgess (1874-1965) wrote thousands of animal stories for children, starting with the 1910 publication of Old Mother West Wind. Burgess's tales convey his fascination with wildlife and his concern for nature, teaching gentle lessons about ecology and respect for the environment.


Publisher Marketing:
One of the most beloved characters in children's literature, Peter Cottontail is up to his long-whiskered nose in rib-tickling escapades in this delightful classic. With gentle charm and humor, famed storyteller Thornton W. Burgess draws young readers into the timeless world of the Green Forest, the Smiling Pool and the Purple Mountains.
Warmth and whimsy are the order of the day as Peter discovers the folly of changing his name, outwits the ever-hungry Reddy Fox, manages a number of hare's-breadth escapes and finally makes an ill-advised decision to hibernate-as Johnny Chuck and other woodland creatures do. The silliness of trying to do what nature never intended is one of the gentle morals of these adventures that combine the fun of a good story with little lessons about wildlife, the environment and being true to one's self.
Newly reset in large easy-to-read type, this unabridged childhood classic will delight young readers today just as it did their parents and grandparents.