The Berenstain Bears and Mama for Mayor! (I Can Read Level 1) (Short Story)


5.00 out of 5 based on 1 customer rating
(1 customer review)

150.00

5.00 out of 5 based on 1 customer rating
(1 customer review)

Description:

When Mama Bear runs for town mayor, she promises to get things done. Mama is the bear for the job! But will she win?

 

Reading Guide:

Parents Read Out to Children: 3-4
Children Read Themselves: 4-7
Parents reading out to children is a healthy ritual, Skryf believes!

English
Genre, Toddler

About The Author

Michael Berenstain (born December 21, 1951) is an American writer and illustrator of children’s books. The son of Stan and Jan Berenstain, he continues the Berenstain Bears series of picture books that his parents inaugurated in 1962.
Berenstain was born in Philadelphia. He studied at Philadelphia College of Art and the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts. His earliest work in the U.S. Library of Congress catalog was published in 1976: K’tonton on an Island in the Sea by Sadie Rose Weilerstein, which he illustrated as Michael Berenstain (Philadelphia: Jewish Publication Society of America). The third K’tonton book, it features “Adventures of a thumb-sized Jewish boy who must fend for himself when stranded on an island.” During the next three years he wrote and illustrated four instructive picture books published by David McKay, The Castle Book and sequels on ships, armor, and lighthouses. He first collaborated with his parents by illustrating two picture books, The Day of the Dinosaur and After the Dinosaurs (Random House, 1987 and 1988), after which he did several dinosaur books himself. He is credited as a creator of his family’s bear family beginning in 1995 as illustrator of the Bear Scouts subseries. Mike continued the Berenstain Bears with his mother following Stan’s death in 2005, and took over creation of the series after Jan’s death in 2012. His older brother Leo Berenstain is involved in management of the franchise.
Berenstain’s father was a secular Jew, and his mother was an Episcopalian. He and his brother were raised in a secular household. Berenstain began investigating Christianity after he married and sent his children to Quaker schools. He was baptized in a Presbyterian church and eventually partnered with Zondervan, an evangelical Christian publishing company, to produce religiously-themed Berenstain Bears books.


1 review for The Berenstain Bears and Mama for Mayor! (I Can Read Level 1) (Short Story)

  1. 5 out of 5

    Great Book!!

    Great story and great artwork!

Add a review