The Story of Mimi and Simi
of Yaffa Ganz
Description
From School Library JournalKindergarten-Grade 2The Story of Mimmy and Simmy could easily be subtitled The Grass Is Always Greener . . . . Mimmy is a wealthy child with many material possessions. Simmy lives in a "rumpledown" house with many brothers and sisters, much work to do and few dresses or dolls. They are both unhappy and jealous of each other. In classic "Prince and the Pauper" fashion, they trade places for one day. Predictably Simmy soon tires of trying on new clothes and playing alone. Mimmy discovers that having lots of siblings can mean not having privacy, free time or new toys. The girls learn to be satisfied with what they have. Adequate pink and yellow illustrations appear on all but one page. The presence of unexplained Hebrew words such as abba, imma and Sukkos make this book most appropriate for Hebrew school libraries. Barbara Webber, Gordon-Barbour Elementary School Library, Gordonsville, Va.Copyright 1986 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Gender
Main Characters
Book Details
- Format Hardcover
- Pages 0 pages
- Publisher Feldheim Publishers
- Publication Date Published
- First Publication Not informed
- Language English
- ISBN 9780873063852
- Edition Not informed
- Category Religion & Spirituality
- Scenario []
Rate this work
🔒 Log in to evaluate this book.
Share your opinion with other readers. Your feedback is very important!
AI-Powered Recommendations
Based on your reading of "The Story of Mimi and Simi", our dual AI algorithms suggest these titles. ⚡ FAISS Baseline 🧠 PyTorch Enhanced
Top Picks For You
🎯 Smart SelectionHow do we choose these recommendations?
Similar Style Recommendations
Books with similar themes, authors, and writing styles to what you're reading now.
Smart AI Matches
Our advanced AI finds books you might love based on deeper patterns and reader preferences.
FAISS Baseline
Fast & ReliableGuard Your Tongue: A Practical Guide to the Laws of Loshon Hora (Gossip and Slander)
Zelig Pliskin
A Little Boy in Search of God: Mysticism in a Personal Light
Isaac Bashevis Singer