Home
My Monster on Top of the Bed: Create-Your-Own Story based on The Monster on Top of the Bed
Barnes and Noble
My Monster on Top of the Bed: Create-Your-Own Story based on The Monster on Top of the Bed
Current price: $11.99


Barnes and Noble
My Monster on Top of the Bed: Create-Your-Own Story based on The Monster on Top of the Bed
Current price: $11.99
Size: OS
Loading Inventory...
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Barnes and Noble
A Companion Book
My
Monster on Top of the Bed
is a companion to Alan H. Jordan's book:
The
. In this edition, children become the author by writing their own story directly on Manuela Pentangelo's illustrations. You will be able to see the pride on their face when they put their own name on the front cover.
If you're not familiar with
The Monster on Top of the Bed,
here's a synopsis:
Once upon a time there was a little girl named Suzy, who used to jump up and down on her bed having just a great time. This scared a young critter named Karrit who lived under Suzy's bed. But, Karrit heard Suzy do all sorts of nice things for people, and he wanted her to be his friend. Still, Suzy ate strange things like cakes made out of pans (pancakes) and the toes of toemays (tomatoes) and-he couldn't believe it-he heard her talk about eating something truly horrendous.
One day Karrit heard Suzy tell her mother that she was lonely and needed a friend. Because of that Karrit decided to visit Suzy, and Suzy got to meet him. At first Suzy was scared of Karrit. After all, he had red, scaly legs, and a blue nose, but he seemed a little scared too. Suzy treated Karrit the way that she would want to be treated if she had gone to his house.
Suzy figured out what was confusing Karrit, and she was sorry to have scared him. She showed him a hotdog (she didn't eat dogs that were hot) a tomato (she didn't eat the toes of matoes) and a carrot (she definitely didn't eat Karrits).
Suzy made Karrit feel that she liked him, and that she wanted him to be happy. Because of that, the two of them played. They kept getting to know each other better until one day they both realized that they didn't have to be afraid of each other, and that it was a mistake for each of them to think the other was a "monster." Suzy and Karrit became best friends, and neither was afraid of monsters again.
Inspiration Flows
The child's own story can be written without looking at the back of the two-story book, or it can be guided by
a story that has delighted children for years and lets a child discover how making a best friend can go a long way to dispelling the monsters that live under, and on top, of a bed. (
The Monster on Top of the Bed
appears in the back of the two-story book-the child's story comes first so the child's book can take center stage.
When children write their own story, they feel a sense of pride. Have you ever seen children when they are excited about a story, any story? They ask to be read the story over and over again. They are even more excited when the story is one that they wrote.
Fire up children's imaginations. . .
Show a child a printed or Kindle edition of
, then, ask them to make up their own story. Not only will writing their own story help the child express his or her creativity, it will help them read better and banish monsters on demand, which will help both children
and
their parents sleep better.
Request an Autograph
Please visit this page to request a bookmark that you can paste into your copy of the book: http://ahjordan.max-opp.com/autograph-it/
My
Monster on Top of the Bed
is a companion to Alan H. Jordan's book:
The
. In this edition, children become the author by writing their own story directly on Manuela Pentangelo's illustrations. You will be able to see the pride on their face when they put their own name on the front cover.
If you're not familiar with
The Monster on Top of the Bed,
here's a synopsis:
Once upon a time there was a little girl named Suzy, who used to jump up and down on her bed having just a great time. This scared a young critter named Karrit who lived under Suzy's bed. But, Karrit heard Suzy do all sorts of nice things for people, and he wanted her to be his friend. Still, Suzy ate strange things like cakes made out of pans (pancakes) and the toes of toemays (tomatoes) and-he couldn't believe it-he heard her talk about eating something truly horrendous.
One day Karrit heard Suzy tell her mother that she was lonely and needed a friend. Because of that Karrit decided to visit Suzy, and Suzy got to meet him. At first Suzy was scared of Karrit. After all, he had red, scaly legs, and a blue nose, but he seemed a little scared too. Suzy treated Karrit the way that she would want to be treated if she had gone to his house.
Suzy figured out what was confusing Karrit, and she was sorry to have scared him. She showed him a hotdog (she didn't eat dogs that were hot) a tomato (she didn't eat the toes of matoes) and a carrot (she definitely didn't eat Karrits).
Suzy made Karrit feel that she liked him, and that she wanted him to be happy. Because of that, the two of them played. They kept getting to know each other better until one day they both realized that they didn't have to be afraid of each other, and that it was a mistake for each of them to think the other was a "monster." Suzy and Karrit became best friends, and neither was afraid of monsters again.
Inspiration Flows
The child's own story can be written without looking at the back of the two-story book, or it can be guided by
a story that has delighted children for years and lets a child discover how making a best friend can go a long way to dispelling the monsters that live under, and on top, of a bed. (
The Monster on Top of the Bed
appears in the back of the two-story book-the child's story comes first so the child's book can take center stage.
When children write their own story, they feel a sense of pride. Have you ever seen children when they are excited about a story, any story? They ask to be read the story over and over again. They are even more excited when the story is one that they wrote.
Fire up children's imaginations. . .
Show a child a printed or Kindle edition of
, then, ask them to make up their own story. Not only will writing their own story help the child express his or her creativity, it will help them read better and banish monsters on demand, which will help both children
and
their parents sleep better.
Request an Autograph
Please visit this page to request a bookmark that you can paste into your copy of the book: http://ahjordan.max-opp.com/autograph-it/