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Mail Duck (A Mail Duck Special Delivery): A Book of Shapes and Surprises

Mail Duck (A Mail Duck Special Delivery): A Book of Shapes and Surprises

Current price: $9.99
Publication Date: April 21st, 2020
Publisher:
Abrams Appleseed
ISBN:
9781419739897
Pages:
20
Usually Ships in 1 to 5 Days

Description

In Mail Duck: A Book of Shapes and Surprises, author-illustrator Erica Sirotich invites little readers to come along on Mail Duck’s delivery route for a day full of lift-the-flap surprises in this fun interactive board book.
 
Mail Duck is delivering differently shaped packages to all his friends on his mail route. (Trudy likes triangles, and Harry likes hearts!) Lift the flaps to peek inside and guess what each friend received. Then head back to the post office for a big surprise: a thank-you celebration for Mail Duck planned by all his pals using the various packages they received throughout the story!
 
Sixteen flaps and a final double-gatefold spread give readers plenty of sweet and silly details to unpack in this charming board book.
 
“Sirotich’s art steals the show, with smiling faces and hidden shapes throughout in gentle greens, cotton-candy pinks, and highly saturated blues. . . . Mail Duck delivers delight, and toddlers will clamor for more.” —Kirkus Review
 

About the Author

Erica Sirotich is an author-illustrator who regularly contributes illustrations and activities to kids’ magazines like Highlights, Ranger Rick Jr., and Boys’ Life, as well as Usborne activity books. She’s always loved receiving mail, and has been collecting postage stamps since she was a little girl. This gave her the inspiration to create Mail Duck! She lives in St. Petersburg, Florida, with her dogs, cats, and husband, Mike.
 

Praise for Mail Duck (A Mail Duck Special Delivery): A Book of Shapes and Surprises

**STARRED REVIEW**
"Sirotich’s art steals the show, with smiling faces and hidden shapes throughout in gentle greens, cotton-candy pinks, and highly saturated blues... Mail Duck delivers delight, and toddlers will clamor for more."
— Kirkus Review