About three years ago I saw Cat’s photos popping up regularly in my friend Terri Farley’s Facebook feed (Terri is a fabulous advocate for wild horses and a children’s author). I quickly friended Cat and look forward daily to her … Continue reading
Add a Comment
new posts in all blogs
By: JOANNA MARPLE,
on 10/1/2014
Blog: Miss Marple's Musings (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: nonfiction, nature, photography, Earth Day, The Yearling, Black Beauty, N.C. Wyeth, Ferdinand the Bull, Blaze, Brave Dogs, Brave Dogs Gentle Dogs: How They Guard Sheep, Cat Urbigkit, Mongolian Eagle Hunters, Parkers Pastures, pastoralism, Teri Farley, Interview, children's books, books, Add a tag
By: Marya Jansen-Gruber,
on 7/29/2010
Blog: Through the Looking Glass Book Review (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Picture books, Children's book reviews, Ferdinand the bull, July is Classic Books Month on TTLG, Add a tag
Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Ferdinand the Bull, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 2 of 2

Blog: Miss Marple's Musings (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: nonfiction, nature, photography, Earth Day, The Yearling, Black Beauty, N.C. Wyeth, Ferdinand the Bull, Blaze, Brave Dogs, Brave Dogs Gentle Dogs: How They Guard Sheep, Cat Urbigkit, Mongolian Eagle Hunters, Parkers Pastures, pastoralism, Teri Farley, Interview, children's books, books, Add a tag

Blog: Through the Looking Glass Book Review (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Picture books, Children's book reviews, Ferdinand the bull, July is Classic Books Month on TTLG, Add a tag
My memories of my early childhood are fragmentary, but there is one that is incredibly clear. I am sitting in my father's lap and he is reading The story of Ferdinand to me. I can almost hear his lovely reading voice. The memory makes me miss my father, but it also warms me and makes me feel very grateful that I had such a wonderful person in my life.
Munro Leaf
Drawings by Robert Lawson
Picture Book
Ages 4 to 6
Penguin, 1977, 0-14-050234-3
There once was a little bull who liked to sit “quietly and smell the flowers.” He had no interest in running or jumping or butting heads with the other little bulls. Ferdinand liked the quiet life. Even when he became a big bull with strong muscles and pointy horns, Ferdinand had no interest in changing his simple lifestyle. The other bulls were all eager to fight in the bull ring, but Ferdinand was happy to sit “quietly under the cork tree and smell the flowers.”
Then one day, five men wearing “funny hats” came to pick the bull that would fight in the bull fights in Madrid . The other bulls in the field did their best to look fierce so that they would be picked. Ferdinand, not surprisingly, walked over to his favorite cork tree to sit in the shade. Which is when something dreadful happened, something that would dramatically change Ferdinand’s life.
This timeless picture book has charmed several generations of children since it came out in 1936. With its beautiful illustrations, its simple text, and its meaningful story, this book is a must for young children.
Add a Comment