News
Handy, Bruce. “ How ‘The Story of Ferdinand’ Became Fodder for the Culture Wars of Its Era,” The New Yorker, Dec. 2017. Reading Rainbow, “If You Give a Mouse a Cookie,” PBS, 1993.
I'm not one for giving a mouse a cookie or letting it freely take one, for that matter. Because as the book goes, if you give a mouse a cookie, they'll always keep coming back for more.
— Well-known proverb The hugely-popular children's book If You Give a Mouse a Cookie involves a boy who gives a mouse a cookie. The mouse then asks for milk, and a series of requests begins.
If you give a mouse a cookie then the fun never ends! A small boy learns that giving a mouse a cookie has many implications that lead to madcap adventures as the house is turned upside down to ...
Here’s the plot: "In the If You Give a Mouse a Cookie series, based on the beloved books by Laura Numeroff and Felicia Bond, we get to know Mouse, Pig, Moose, Dog and Cat and their favorite humans.
A conservative economist even warned in The Washington Post several years ago that “If You Give a Mouse” is an ode to a welfare state, noting that someone has to pay for that cookie.
A clever scheme artist mouse successfully stole a cookie. The mouse is seen sneaking out of an oven, checking the coast is clear and running to grab an Oreo. Carrying the Oreo in its mouth, the ...
LOOKING AFTER LOVEY. Moose entrusts Mouse to babysit his stuffed lovey for the afternoon. THE OLD SHELL GAME. When Herman, the Hermit Crab, outgrows his shell, Mouse takes it upon himself to find ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results