User:Anneteag/sandbox4

= One Fine Day =

One fine day, written and illustrated by Nonny Hogrogian, is a 1971 picture book published by Macmillan Publishers. One Fine Day was a Caldecott Medal honor book for 1972, and was Hogrogian's second caldecott medal of a total of two medals in her career. In 1966, she won her first Caldecott medal for her illustrations in the book Always room for one more. One Fine Day was reissued in 2005 by Simon & Schuster childrens publishing.

Description
The story written by hogrogian, is an old armenian tale which has been retold for children. It is an adorable, and beautifully illustrated story. It is a tale in which a young fox steals, and must repay the woman for what he stole in order to get back his tail. It is a tale with a valuable lesson for children which is to not take things that do not belong to you.

Plot
The story written by hogrogian, is an old armenian tale which has been retold. It is the story of a fox who was traveling through the great forest, he became very thirsty, and came across an old farm woman. He noticed a jug of milk, and decided to drink the milk without asking for permission. The old farm woman spotted the fox drinking her milk, and proceeded by chopping of his tail. The fox begged the woman to sew it back on, but she refused. They agreed on a trade, if the fox could get a jug of milk then the woman would sew back his tail. The fox had to go through numerous animals, and carry out different tasks to get this jug of milk. Until finally he was able to take the jug of milk to the old farm woman, and she sewed back his tail.

Critical Reception
Nonny Hogrogian wrote a book called One fine Day, and this book won a Caldecott medal in 1972. Meghan writes " this is a beautifully illustrated story about a young fox who steals a drink of milk and then suffers the loss of his tail because of it.  Through determination and a willingness to work with others, this fox finally rights the wrong he committed at the beginning of the story and gets his tail back." She also talks of a "very simple cumulative plot, but through repetition and accumulation, the story develops a rhythm that younger listeners will love." This book is an adorable retelling of an armenian story. It is the story of a second chance so to speak, the old woman gives the fox a chance to get his tail back after he stole a drink of her milk. He must depend on other animals to help him get his tail back. Powells book calls it "most distinguished picture book of 1971". Another person says that this book has a "compelling message about taking things that do not belong to you". This very imaginative, illustrative book shows children that they shouldn't be taking things that do not belong to them.