Danny the dinosaur book


Danny and the Dinosaur by Syd Hoff

Displaying 1 - 30 of 404 reviews

Matt

3,668 reviews12.8k followers

November 26, 2017

Neo I took the lead with this book, exploring the origins of the relationship between Danny and the Dinosaur. After visiting a museum, Danny discovers a new (and 100 million year-old) friend. From playing games to helping others, and even enjoying time with Danny’s friends, the Dinosaur shows just how interesting things can be with a giant pet. Neo struggled a little and we took four sit-down reading periods to complete this book, but he did get to the end and felt the accomplishment. We’ve read one other book in the series and will likely return to it, given the chance. Apparently a classic from over 50 years ago, Neo likes the action and story told by Hoff in this series debut.

    children-s read-with-neo

July 1, 2010

It's easy to see why this book has put smiles on children's faces for over fifty years. I know my six-year-old self would have LOVED it if a dinosaur befriended me at the museum, gave me a ride around town, and played hide-and-seek with me and my friends! I think there are such cute touches in the book with the text and especially the illustrations, like when the dinosaur makes a bridge for the people to cross the street, or when he sees the "giant rocks" (buildings) and thinks of climbing them. So funny! I also appreciate Danny's sensitivity when he realizes that the dinosaur really can't play hide-and-seek the right way so he and his friends adjust their game to help the dinosaur feel welcome and "win." Of course, there is a bit of old-fashionedness to the story and illustrations (including the completely un-PC second page where Danny enters the museum and sees "Indians and bears and Eskimos"!) but I think the fun and friendship of the story would carry it through to today's kids.

    childrens-picture-books dinosaurs

July 20, 2010

My husband brought Danny and the Dinosaur home from the library today. He immediately sat down and my daughter climbed in his lap. I listened as he read and looked at the pictures over his shoulder. I believe I have read this before long ago. My daughter sat for about half the book and stood to look at the pictures for most of the rest. I enjoyed listening in and my husband said “It’s cute.” I liked the bright pictures. I liked the fun that Danny and the children have with the dinosaur. Especially, hide-and-seek. I think my daughter really likes the pictures in this one. She just took the book off the couch and is flipping through it. As a family, we all enjoyed this one!


    Ronyell

    955 reviews319 followers

    July 28, 2016

    "Danny and the Dinosaur" is a New York Times Outstanding Book of the Year Award by Syd Hoff and it is about how a young boy named Danny starts playing with a friendly dinosaur who has come to life when in a museum that Danny goes to. "Danny and the Dinosaur" is a true masterpiece for many children who love books about dinosaurs!

    Syd Hoff has done an outstanding job at both illustrating and writing this book. Syd Hoff's illustrations are both creative and cute at the same time as the dinosaur that Danny encounters looks extremely friendly and the dinosaur's body would usually take up the pages that he is on and Danny himself is an extremely cute and friendly looking child as he always has a smile on his face when he is around the dinosaur. Also, what made Syd Hoff's illustrations truly creative is that there would be a set of two pages that are mainly in brown, black and white and then the next set of two pages would be in all kinds of color, which is a similar format that Madeline's Rescue had. Syd Hoff makes this story extremely cute and heartwarming at the same time as Danny learns about the true meaning of friendship when he spends much of his day with the dinosaur and enjoys his time spent with the dinosaur. Syd Hoff also made this book highly creative as this was one of the few children's books that I have read where a human child talks to a dinosaur like a human being and Syd Hoff has made the interaction between the dinosaur and Danny so heartwarming as Danny and the Dinosaur act like true best friends.

    "Danny and the Dinosaur" is truly one of the greatest books about dinosaurs ever created and it would be a huge hit for children who love dinosaurs and learning the true meaning of friendship. I would recommend this book to children ages three and up since there is nothing inappropriate in this book and the writing format of this book is extremely simple for three year olds and up to read.

    Review is also on: Rabbit Ears Book Blog


      animal-books bedtime-stories children-s-book

    Abigail

    7,088 reviews181 followers

    October 15, 2019

    I grew up reading Syd Hoff's

    Danny and the Dinosaur

    , a beginning reader originally published in 1958 as part of the prestigious I Can Read series, and have many fond memories of Danny's day of adventure with his prehistoric friend. Who hasn't fantasized about having a pet dinosaur, or wondered what those fossilized skeletons in the museum would look like, if they suddenly came alive?

    Recently, a post on one of my favorite children's literature blogs, American Indians in Children's Literature, drew my attention to the problematic nature of the illustration in which Danny, at the museum for the day, is looking at a display containing an Indian, a bear, and an Eskimo. I was surprised, because although I had always found it odd and inappropriate that the achievements of non-European peoples - Native Americans, Pacific Islanders - would be collected in a museum devoted to "natural" history, while similar artifacts from European peoples are labeled "art," and find their way to a different sort of museum, I had no recollection of this illustration, from my childhood reading. Needless to say, I decided to track down a copy and reread, especially when - by sheer coincidence - we chose Danny and the Dinosaur as one of our July dinosaur-themed reads over in the Picture-Book Club to which I belong.

    So... does this single illustration - which unquestionably hearkens back to outdated notions of racial hierarchy (some of them still with us, unfortunately) in which Europeans are somehow more fully "human," while non-Europeans are in the same category as animals - ruin the story? Will it harm the young reader? Is Professor Debbie Reese right? Should Danny and the Dinosaur be pulled from shelves? My answers are, respectively: Yes and No, Yes, Yes, and No.

    To wit: I don't know that it's fair to say that the illustration "ruins" the story, since I can only speak for myself, but I do know that I will never be entirely comfortable with this title again. I will always be thinking of that illustration, what it means, and what harm it might do. Which brings me to: yes, I think images like this, for all their seeming innocence - perhaps because of them? - can do harm. Perhaps not lasting, terrible harm, all on their own, but if combined with enough similar material, not insignificant harm either. Meaning, of course, that yes, Professor Reese is right. She's right to point out this illustration, and she's right to question it. But finally, no, no I don't think, as she does, that it should be pulled from the library shelves. Leaving aside my passionate belief that the library should be a repository for the printed word, not some revolving-door collection based on popularity (or even morality), I also think that titles such as this fade away when they have no more significance, and it's worse than useless trying to forbid them. Worse, because we give things immense power by forbidding them...

    I gave this three stars, because it would be untruthful, in light of my childhood love of it, to give it less. But although I wouldn't support its removal from the library, I also wouldn't go out of my way to promote it.

      dinosaurs early-readers sweet-youth

    Brad

    Author 2 books1,684 followers

    April 26, 2012

    I imagine this was a charming book when it was released in the late fifties. I suppose I can see the appeal. It's a simple book for kids who are learning to read. It has a goofy looking dinosaur. It has a polite little kid. And they have fun little adventures in some nondescript American city.

    But it's not the fifties anymore, and I am a jaded bastard who likes his kids books on the salty (or maybe just interesting) side. So the sweet dino and the sweet boy are like the syrupy skein of goo at the back of the tongue after 5 cans of warm, flat Dr. Pepper. Every once in a while I get a craving for Dr. Pepper despite that coating, and the same thing happens with Danny and the Dinosaur. I gorge myself, hate the after taste, then wait a year or two for the craving to return.

    Lately, though, my little Scoutie's developing a taste for Danny and the Dinosaur, so the book is overstaying its welcome, and the after taste is making me gag. I'm going to try and redirect her into Harold and the Purple Crayon. Wish me luck.

      children out-loud read-to-bronte

    July 2, 2010

    This book came out when I was 4 or 5 and I’ll bet I read it when I was young, but I don’t remember it. I hope that I read it when I was 5 or 6 or 7; I would have absolutely loved it.

    It’s a very cute story, very 1958, but I think today’s young readers will enjoy it too. The text is good for early readers, and younger children will enjoy having this read to them.

    Most kids like dinosaurs and the dinosaur here is adorable. He’s endearing, friendly, helpful, and he uses correct grammar too. He’s funny too, if you get the jokes.

    The illustrations are really great; they’re a lot of fun.

    I read this for July’s Children's Books group Picture Books Club. This month’s theme: dinosaurs.

      books-about-books childrens fiction

    Josiah

    3,211 reviews145 followers

    November 6, 2022

    A visit to the museum turns into the craziest, most wonderful day of Danny's life when a little unexplained magic brings him a thrillingly unique playmate. The standard museum pieces are interesting—antique weapons, decorative vases, knight's armor, life-size figures of animals and people—but the dinosaur section is what captures Danny's fancy. He's a dino fanatic, and the only thing better than touring the museum's dinosaur hall would be if one of the behemoths came to life and could play with him. Danny gets his impossible wish when a long-necked dino awakens from its display case and asks him to play, and Danny doesn't waste a moment saying yes. The possibilities for amusement with a dinosaur are endless.

    The first order of business is to take the ride of a lifetime on the creature's long neck, which lifts Danny high into the sky as the new pair of friends gallop about town. Danny and his dino peek in on a professional baseball game, ferry across a canal, and spend time at the zoo, where a live dinosaur is a cinch to trump any animal exhibit. The zoo animals are unhappy that the crowds favor the prehistoric creature ahead of them, leading the man in charge to ask the dinosaur to move on so "the animals will get looked at," a laugh-out-loud moment. Danny and his titanic mount have great fun playing with Danny's kid friends, teaching the dinosaur tricks and playing hide and seek, though the behemoth's size puts him at a decided disadvantage when he's doing the hiding. Danny's dinosaur has a selfless side, too, lifting people across busy streets and carrying ladies and their shopping parcels so they haven't so far to walk. Yet even the ultimate fantasy of palling around with a dinosaur must end, and this story isn't without its bittersweet moment as the boy and his Jurassic companion part ways. But what a time they had together. Not every boy is so blessed as to spend a day with a real live dinosaur.

    Stepping smoothly into Danny's life as if nothing could be more natural, the dinosaur's majestic presence is perhaps taken for granted by the boy and his friends. They suggest games they could easily play on their own, or with a dog instead of a gigantic prehistoric reptile, but maybe this nonchalance allows them to fully enjoy the experience without overthinking it, without spending so much energy fretting about its inevitable end that they neglect to appreciate the euphoric ride they're on. How often is one's fondest desire brought to life, especially when it's a desire we thought would never come to pass? This is why the story's ending is wistful, because miracles usually don't last forever and we know that the person who was the improbable answer to our heart-wish may exit our life sooner or later. But as long as we savored the time we had together, we're infinitely better off for the blessing they were to us. Danny would never take back his one beautiful day with his dinosaur.

    Syd Hoff's New Yorker art is in top form for Danny and the Dinosaur, and his writing is no less impressive. The narrative is fantastical by design, with no explanation attempted for how the dinosaur comes to life or can communicate with humans in English. It's purely a fantasy for kids who want to play with their very own dinosaur vicariously through Danny, and there's nothing wrong with that. I rate Danny and the Dinosaur two and a half stars; it's one of the better easy readers I've come across, a pleasure for all ages. Come prepared to think a little about the nature of spectacular wishes granted and have lots and lots and lots of fun.


      December 10, 2012

      My husband had a copy of Danny and the Dinosaur by Syd Hoff as a child. His parents still have his old collection of picture books by the bedroom the grandkids use when visiting. On our last night of a recent visit, I read the book to Sean and Harriet. What I didn't realize, was that it's one of my son's favorite "I Can Read Books."

      Danny goes to the library and sees a dinosaur on display. It makes him wish that he could have a pet dinosaur. The dinosaur comes alive and offers to spend the day with Danny, saying he needs a break after so many thousands of years!

      The rest of the book is all about the dinosaur's adventures in and around town with Danny. Lots of the jokes involve the dinosaur's height: he becomes a walking bridge across a busy street, a walking bus for impatient commuters, and a barge in the bay.

      As the dinosaur is a friendly and intelligent creature, he quickly becomes friends with adults and children alike. The end of the book centers on him and Danny playing with neighborhood children. A game of hide and seek is rather one-sided but the children eventually find a way to make it work.

      It's a cute book. I can see why my husband and son like it.

        birds-and-dinosaurs borrowed picture-book

      November 26, 2009

      Danny visits the museum and when he gets to the dinosaur display a real dinosaur pops out and asks Danny to play with him. So off they go through the town having lots of fun ending up playing hide 'n' seek with the neighbourhood children but as sunset comes along everyone must go home including the dinosaur who must get back to the museum. This is one of the original "I Can Read" books that has stood the test of time. What little boy doesn't go through the dinosaur stage? This silly story is a load of fun and can be enjoyed by any age. Syd Hoff was one of the great children's author/illustrators and his works will never go out of print. Some of the PC persuasion may find the display of the "Indian" and "Eskimo" offensive, but the rest of us will enjoy a good old-fashioned timeless classic. One word of note though, buy yourself an old secondhand copy if possible. The new reprints have been recolourized with dark full-colour illustrations rather than the light pencil crayon effect of the originals.


        August 5, 2018

        The book features Danny, a young boy whose day in the museum gets much better when he meets a real Dinosaur. The two spend the day together, heading downtown, to the zoo, and finally spending some time playing with Danny’s neighborhood friends.

        I remember enjoying this book as a kid, and it holds up well today. While there is really nothing in the way of plot, the pictures and words, sometimes more captions to the pictures than anything else, tell of a delightful day together for these two new friends. The pictures are a bit dated since the book came out in the 1950’s, but I doubt kids notice or care. Instead, they’ll be caught up in the fun of spending a day with a dinosaur, smiling and laughing at some of the situations along the way.

        Read my full review at Carstairs Considers.

          2018 picture-book

        March 11, 2022

        Month of January 2022: Young Reader’s Classics

        AR POINTS: .5 READING LEVEL: 2.3

        A cute children’s I Can Read book written and published in 1958. It is similar to the Dick and Jane I Can Read books, which are the books we learned to read in school. I’m just now reminded of a book my mom bought us girls about Harry the dog written by Gene Zion. I remember specifically reading “Harry the Dirty Dog (1956), which I just now read again free on Archive.org website. I had totally forgotten about that book. Unfortunately, my family didn’t save any of our childhood books.

        This is 1 of 4 books saved by the Woolwine family. It was in with my cousin’s (Lancer Woolwine) family photos, which I am currently organizing for their family.


          Ann

          510 reviews

          July 17, 2010

          Danny spends the day with a dinosaur, doing all the fun sort of things he'd do with the rest of his friends (i. e. playing hide and seek, etc).

          This is a cute, comical, story with a sweet ending, but there really isn't *that* much to the plot. I'd probably give this three stars, except that I remember enjoying it when I was little and for whatever reason (the story, the illustrations, or both) it made an impression on me. So, for that I gave it an extra star.


            Karl

            213 reviews1 follower

            April 16, 2008

            Childhood favorite. Who doesn't want a dinosaur friend?


              Jeremy

              165 reviews46 followers

              November 6, 2007

              Kid has a dinosaur. How friggin' great is that?

              I like that when Danny gets the dinosaur, he chooses to ride it around town, much like you might if you'd just acquired, say, a new moped. Sure, you could alert the media and become a overnight sensation and a historical footnote, or somehow contain the dinosaur and make a handsome living charging admission. You could even assume that you've lost all control of your mental faculties, and flee gibbering into the woods, subsisting on checkerberry and using a pointy rock and a poplar branch to fashion a chipmunk bludgeon that in the back of your mind you know you'll never get up the guts to use. But why put yourself (and the dinosaur, for that matter) through all that when you could simply hop on and take him out for a spin, leaving a sprightly trail of charmingly illustrated mayhem in your wake, and no doubt all but depleting the town's already meager budget.

                children

              November 21, 2012

              Title: Danny the Dinosaur Written and Illustrated by: Syd Hoff
              Genre: Fantasy Age Level: P; I Date: 2003.
              Danny goes to a museum one day to meet a dinosaur. This dinosaur is really nice and wants to be Danny’s friend. The dinosaur takes Danny for a ride on his back. The dinosaur is so tall, he hits the telephone wires. The dinosaur helps people cross the street. Everyone likes him. When they went to the zoo the dinosaur was asked to leave because he was taking the attention away from the animals. Danny introduces him to his friends and they play hide n seek. At the end of the day the dinosaur says he has to go back to the museum. The pictures look like they are colored in with crayon. Hoff does not use many colors in the book. However, the book is interesting to read. Children love the idea of having a talking dinosaur or animal and this book gives them hope that it could actually happen.


                J

                2,729 reviews16 followers

                July 5, 2017

                This is definitely one of my favorite childhood books for who wouldn't love the fact of checking out a museum and then getting to spend a whole day playing with a very friendly dinosaur. And as if that isn't a whole sundae in itself the dinosaur can actually talk back to you while is very willing to be of service to people who would just gape or deface it in the museum anyway.

                The book is an introduction to reading so there aren't that many hard words that children will struggle to get over although Eskimo may end up causing problems to some. There is a bit of a rhythm to the telling of the story that will hold the reader's interest as Danny and his dinosaur go through a whole day of fun.

                Charming and full of imagination this will be one dinosaur you won't want to let go of....

                  children-fiction z-format-book

                September 9, 2011

                This book was kind of a mix between a picture book and a transitional book. It had a good mix of words and pictures, but probably too long and too many words to just be considered a picture book; at the same time, it was a way easier read than something like Junie B. Jones so it probably wasn't fully transitional either. As far as the plot goes though, I enjoyed it. It's another one of those books that takes your mind away to another place and really gets your imagination going. And when I was a kid, I LOVED dinosaurs, so the idea of a dinosaur coming to life and getting to spend the day with him seemed really cool to me.

                  adventure animals dinosaurs

                July 9, 2013

                Who doesn't like dinosaurs!? I read this to my 8 week old daughter and she loved it... Well, she didn't hate it anyway ;) I vaguely remember reading this in elementary school and I would recommend every child reads it at least once. Any young child can relate to the activities in the story line and the dialogue is quite easy to follow (don't forget to add your own exclamation points!). There really isn't any diversity in the story, which is typical for many stories written in the 1950s. Furthermore, the story isn't really educational. This aside, it is a great story and can be considered a "comfort" read for any young (or even older) child.

                  zoey-s-collection

                October 17, 2019

                Originally published in 1978, this book came with a special pack that I ordered through scholastic. I had no idea what this was about and I’m not a big dinosaur fan. There’s a reason this book is now a classic (though I’d never heard of it). It has a gentle, sweet tone I’ve come to expect from children’s books from story books from before I’d say about 1960. The story is charming and the illustrations are colorful and fun to look at. It’s much longer than your average children’s easy reader also.

                  childrens

                November 4, 2012

                One day Danny goes to the museum. He likes the dinosaurs best and wishes that he could have one of his own. And in all good books, Danny gets his wish and gets to spend a day with a dinosaur. They play games and eat together. But at the end of the day the dinosaur needs to go back where he is needed and Danny is left to go home, but knowing that he doesn't have room for a dinosaur.
                Great for early readers who are ready for short sentences and short chapters.

                  beginner-books

                October 31, 2013

                Pretty much any book my reluctant reader can read aloud and wants to read aloud gets an automatic four stars from me. It doesn't hold up as well to repeat readings as, say, Frog and Toad, but it's still tolerable. It's a cute story of friendship, and one I recall fondly from my own childhood. Do they any longer make quality children's books that are easy for a first or second grader to read? Every one I've found that fits both criteria was written prior to 1970.

                  childrens

                April 2, 2015

                I loved this book as a kid and was pleased to find it at a rummage sale recently. I had to buy this for my 4 year old song. I love reading it to him. I love how much he enjoys the magic of the book. He makes me read it to him as if the dinosaur is female, which is interesting to figure out what in his head determined that the male dinosaur in the book was actually a female in his head. What a magical and fun book.

                  read-to-boys read-to-james

                May 19, 2009

                Papa: So...

                Miloš: I really liked that they had fun together, and not did not have fun.

                Papa: Okay, what else?

                Miloš: Actually, that was it. Okay, Pa.

                Papa: Okay. (But I would like to mention that this book is 64 pages long and contains the first page Miloš has ever read without pictures. The boy is a reading fiend).

                  kids learning-to-read read-by-miloš

                June 13, 2012

                Danny visits the museum where he discovers his favorite creature of all, dinosaurs. To Danny’s surprise, one of the dinosaurs comes to life. Follow Danny and the dinosaur as they spend the day together exploring the city, eating ice cream and playing hide and seek with Danny’s friends.

                I like this simple and charming tale because it really plays towards a child's imagination.

                  5360-summer-12 easy-readers

                April 30, 2013

                This book shows the friendship of a boy and his dinosaur. It shows all the different things dinosaurs could do with humans if they were around today, that is if they were tamed. This book could also be used in the first grade class, and is easy enough for students who struggle with reading as well as student who don't.


                  February 1, 2010

                  This is a wonderful story for any child that loves dinosaurs. Danny finds a dinosaur in a museum that comes alive. He goes on all kinds of adventures with his new playmate. In the end then dinosaur has to go home. Danny is okay with that since his new friend is too big to stay in his house.

                    children-s-fiction-fantasy

                  Holly

                  437 reviews33 followers

                  May 7, 2021

                  Picked up for my 1950s themed storytime. Put down for my 1950s storytime by page 6 of the 9780060224660 edition due to potentially racist wording & illustrations. A thing of its time? Sure...it was 1958 and Syd Hoff was a white American man. Read & endorse for a public storytime in a world after March 5, 2021? Nahhh. I have the 2019 storybook collection edition requested from a neighboring library but other youth librarians be aware. It can chillax on the shelf for sure [ALA Intellectual Freedom Committee Member 2019-2021 before y'all accuse me of something] but it is in the same vein as If I Ran the Zoo by Seuss.

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                  Danny loves dinosaurs and has a terrific dinosaur collection.

                  Danny loves dinosaurs and has a terrific dinosaur collection.

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                  Description

                  In Danny the Dinosaur, Danny loves dinosaurs. He really loves dinosaurs! Danny takes the reader on a tour of his home to show off his terrific dinosaur collection. How many dinosaur treasures does Danny have? Danny the Dinosaur, part of Dynamo Danny Set 9, is a B leveled, Early Emergent reader.

                  Danny the Dinosaur can be found in the following Sets and Collections:
                  • The Danny Collection
                  • Danny Leveled Set B
                  • Decodable Practice Set
                  • Dynamo Danny Set 9
                  • The eBook 75 Membership
                  • The eBook75 Companion Set
                  • Levels A-C MRB Early Emergent Reading Set
                  • The MRB Menagerie
                  • Reading Recovery® Books Set
                  Coordinating Activities:
                  • Use these directions to make our Menagerie Animal Cracker Box to store your books.
                  • Write a Limerick Poem about Danny. Use Danny’s The Big Race poem for inspiration.
                  • Explore Poetry with Danny and Bee for poetry activities and templates.
                  • Create your own Comic Speech Bubble about Danny.
                  • Continue the story with a Three-Panel Story Strip or a Six-Panel Story Strip.
                  • Color and send your own Custom Danny Card.
                  • Print and fold a Danny Fortune Teller about Danny and his friends.
                  • Organize your Danny books in the classroom with a Danny Doghouse, complete with its own chalkboard roof.
                  • Print Dynamo Danny Book Labels for your classroom reading library. Level labels are formatted to print on the Avery Easy Peel® 5160 Labels template.
                  Read more about Level B.
                  Read more about Early Emergent Readers.

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                  American writers

                  The stories about Danny and the Dinosaur are rightfully considered classics of early childhood reading. A single space of words and pictures gives children the desire and courage to read on their own. The text is simple, understandable, without complex words, but not primitive. The plot of each fairy tale is holistic, understandable and close to the little reader. The font is large. And, perhaps, the most important thing for a child is emotional illustrations, thanks to which he will not “get stuck” on the first pages, but will continue to read and look at the book with enthusiasm.
                  The collection includes three fairy tales: "Danny and the Dinosaur", "Danny and the Too Tall Dinosaur", "Danny, the Dinosaur and the Puppy".
                  An inquisitive boy named Danny goes to the museum. He considers Indians, bears, Eskimos, guns, swords. And, finally, in one of the halls he sees dinosaurs.
                  Danny is a smart boy, he knows that these ancient reptiles have died out long ago, but suddenly one of the museum dinosaurs spoke to him. Danny was truly happy. Sitting on the neck of a new friend, Danny went to the city.
                  Perhaps the Dinosaur was even luckier than Danny. He enjoys ice cream, plays hide-and-seek with children, rolls them on his back, learns to follow commands with the Puppy with pleasure, does good deeds - turns into a bridge on which you can cross to the other side of the street, and saves a crane operator in trouble. He even becomes a celebrity: when he and Danny come to the zoo, all the visitors, forgetting about other animals, consider only the Dinosaur.
                  Of course Danny would like to take the Dinosaur home with him. How great it would be to live together with such an amazing, huge and kind pet! But it turns out that the Dinosaur has a sense of duty: he returns to the museum because HE IS NEEDED THERE. And in parting, he says that together with Danny, he experienced his best day in many millions of years.
                  Recommended for children who are starting to read on their own.

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                  American writers

                  The stories about Danny and the Dinosaur are rightfully considered classics of early childhood reading. A single space of words and pictures gives children the desire and courage to read on their own. The text is simple, understandable, without complex words, but not primitive. The plot of each fairy tale is holistic, understandable and close to the little reader. The font is large. And, perhaps, the most important thing for a child is emotional illustrations, thanks to which he will not “get stuck” on the first pages, but will continue to read and look at the book with enthusiasm.
                  The collection includes three fairy tales: "Danny and the Dinosaur", "Danny and the Too Tall Dinosaur", "Danny, the Dinosaur and the Puppy".
                  An inquisitive boy named Danny goes to the museum. He considers Indians, bears, Eskimos, guns, swords. And, finally, in one of the halls he sees dinosaurs.
                  Danny is a smart boy, he knows that these ancient reptiles have died out long ago, but suddenly one of the museum dinosaurs spoke to him. Danny was truly happy. Sitting on the neck of a new friend, Danny went to the city.
                  Perhaps the Dinosaur was even luckier than Danny. He enjoys ice cream, plays hide-and-seek with children, rolls them on his back, learns to follow commands with the Puppy with pleasure, does good deeds - turns into a bridge on which you can cross to the other side of the street, and saves a crane operator in trouble. He even becomes a celebrity: when he and Danny come to the zoo, all the visitors, forgetting about other animals, consider only the Dinosaur.
                  Of course Danny would like to take the Dinosaur home with him. How great it would be to live together with such an amazing, huge and kind pet! But it turns out that the Dinosaur has a sense of duty: he returns to the museum because HE IS NEEDED THERE. And in parting, he says that together with Danny, he experienced his best day in many millions of years.
                  Recommended for children who are starting to read on their own.

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                  The book "Danny and the Dinosaur" is being filmed

                  The book "Danny and the Dinosaur" is being filmed

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                  J. Todd Harris and Mark Marcum plan to make an animated version of the 1958 children's book Danny and the Dinosaur.

                  This is a story written by Sid Hoff about a boy named Danny who goes to a museum and encounters a dinosaur. The dinosaur turns out to be alive and goes for a walk with him. The dinosaur helps people, obeys the rules of the road, does not eat lawn grass, and generally behaves like a very decent and law-abiding citizen. At the end of the day, after playing hide-and-seek with the children (the dinosaur is not very strong in this), he returns to the museum.

                  Over 60 books have been published about Danny and the dinosaur. The cartoon will include not only this story, but also other adventures of a funny couple.


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