When becoming a comedy idea writer of Jon Scieszka's work, Jon Scieszka is the best among those who have mastered the art of the entire work. Jon's books all have a common theme: a comedy idea. Do not count on ordinary people with Scieszka's book. The quirky theme is the trademark of Scieszka, and there are no good examples of books than Stinky Cheese Man and other foolish stories. In this book, Scieszka insists on the theme from the front to the back.
Comparison of Jon Scieszka, Lane Smith and Tim Burton The illustration of Jon Scieszka, Baloney of Lane Smith (HENRY P.) and The Nightmare Before Christmas of Tim Burton encourages us to see the world through twisted lenses. I would like to compare how two illustrators display their work in a distorted view. Scieszka and Smith made Henry P. a boy of various types of SF adventure and explained why he was late for school.
[Steiner tells three fairy tales and uses them to remove his anthropological wisdom so that you can understand the members of the three souls, wisely, intellectually, and spiritually. Because the eyes and ears have a different relationship with the surrounding world, there are three soul members. They will be a means of understanding themselves and the world. In ancient times, human beings and nature were very close and still related to them. These stories provide a giant 's fax which once had great power, but understood by the perception perception.
Another book I chose to read aloud was Jon Scieszka's The Stinky Cheese Man and other pretty foolish stories. Scieszka is using rude humorous tones to imitate the genre of classical fairy tales. Most students like his approach. While sharing this book, I emphasized some of Scieszka's discreet fairy tale elements. The book contains stories like "Princess and Bowling" and "The Real Ugly Duckling." Students have heard of other Scieszka books including "Frog Prince Continue" and "The true story of three little pigs".