leitura arco iris, arco-íris Club
cadastrar-se
Fanpop
New Post
Explore Fanpop
posted by hornean
Every fall, when the leaves start melting into pretty purples and reds and those bright golden shades of pumpkin, Mama says, “Coat time, Gabrielle!”


And they ride two trains to Grandpa’s tailor comprar in the city. On the Silver Express from Meadowlawn to Pennsylvania Station, Gabby sits close to the window, her nose pressed to the smudge-glass for nearly an hour.


At Penn Station they walk fast, through long, dark passageways and underground tunnels. On a distant speaker someone calls out, “Thirty-fourth Street! Thirty-fourth Street! Change here for the Downtown Express, Uptown Express and the Crosstown Shuttle….” Mama follows arrows to the Broadway Local, the noisiest subway of all, with its ancient rattly windows and wheels that hiss and screech so loud they have to cover their ears between stations.


Grampa’s comprar is on the twenty-eighth floor in a fancy office building that is even taller than that. The elevator is too fast and too crowded.
“This ano you ought to get gold buttons,” Mama says, “big gold buttons on your navy blue coat.”

A lady in pele, peles steps out on twenty-four, and Gabby bends progressivo, para a frente to pull her gray ragg socks just past her knee. “I think a purple casaco would be much nicer,” she answers.
“Purple?” Mama laughs.
“What’s funny about purple?” demands Gabby, puffing out her lower lip.
“There’s nothing funny about it,” admits Mama, “but navy blue coats are what you always get.”
Gabby makes a face. She sighs. She slips her left foot into and out of the fringed moccasin that slides off her heel when she walks.


“Greetings!” Grampa hugs them both in two woolly arms. He wears the same green sweater as always, with its suede-patched elbows and a line of leather buttons down the front. Grampa calls it one of his treasures, a relic from the old days.


“Did we keep you waiting, Pop?” Mama stands at the mural of windows with city views all around.
Gabby moves toward the neat rows of fabric on the mural opposite. She drags red-painted fingertips, slowly, across the arco iris, arco-íris of as cores stacked in open shelves way up to the ceiling and down to the polished wood floor. Hello Purple, she whispers, pausing on the prettiest shade of all.
“Hungry, girls?” There’s fun in Grampa’s eyes. Magician-style, he uncovers a prato, travessa of sandwiches from the corner deli.
Mama laughs. “Up to your old tricks again, Pop?” She reaches for a fat sandwich, eats it fast, then rushes off to do her city shopping.


When she is gone, Grampa turns to Gabby. “Salami or pastrami?”
“Salami,” she answers, “the same as always. Did you remember pickles, Grampa?”
“I even ordered extras.”
They sit side por side on Grampa’s big oak escrivaninha, mesa with drawers from topo, início to bottom. Everywhere are pencils and pens and little scraps of paper. rosa, -de-rosa messages are tacked to a cork board, and an important-looking calendar is marked up with appointments and phone numbers and saia and camisa and casaco numbers too.
Grampa bites into his sanduíche and makes a little mmmnnn sound, which means he likes it very much. “Want a bite of the leanest pastrami in town?” he asks.
Gabby shakes her head, “I’ll stick to what I know I like. Salami.”
“Once in a while it’s good to try something new,” he suggests. “How else do you know if you like it?”
“Next time, maybe.”


“Now business.” Grampa brushes crumbs off the knees of his pants and points to a half dozen bolts of dark fabric. “I’ve pulled all the navy blues. Dark and lighter, nearly sapphire, smoky navy, hazy navy—”
“I want purple,” Gabby interrupts.
“Purple? But you always get a navy coat!”
“This time I want purple.”
When Grampa frowns, his thick eyebrows meet to cover up that tiny scar above his nose. “I suppose you asked your mother?”
Gabby looks at the toes of her moccasins.
“She said no purple coat,” Grampa guesses.
“Not exactly,” Gabby says slowly. “What she said was, navy blue coats are what I always get.”


Grampa marches past the escrivaninha, mesa twice. Gabby marches behind. “Purple,” he murmurs, and he seems to be talking to the air.
“A beautiful purple casaco down to my ankles, with purple buttons and a big pocket on the side. It must have a purple hood,” she goes on, “and a pleat in back to make it easy when I run. I’m a fast runner, Grampa.”

He stops pacing and pours cream soda from a can. Bubbles rise quickly to the rim of two glasses. “A navy casaco is such a classic, Gabrielle!”
“Once in a while it’s good to try something new,” she answers. “You said so yourself.”
Grampa rubs a fist across the pointy part of his chin. He walks to the window with city views all around. Then he says, “Your mother wanted a tangerine-colored dress once, when she was six or so.”


Tangerine!” Gabby shrieks.
Grampa nods. “Tangerine, tangerine. All she talked about was tangerine!”
“Well, did you make her one? Did you, Grampa?”
“Finally, I did.”
“I bet it was pretty too, almost as pretty as my purple casaco could be.”
Suddenly Grampa clicks two fingers in the air. “I have an idea,” he begins. “Of course, one needs an exceptional tailor.…”
You’re an exceptional tailor.”
Grampa stands a little taller. “This ano I will make you something very special,” he announces, “a casaco that is navy blue on one side—and purple on the other. Reversible!”
Gabby jumps high in the air. When she lands, her socks are scrunched around her ankles. “Let’s makes the purple side first.”


“I hate the fittings,” she complains a few minutos later.
Grampa’s mouth is lined with pins. He measures her arms, from shoulders to fingertips. He measures her legs from the heel up, and her waist, and across the topo, início of her chest. When there is nothing left to measure, he kisses the tip of her nose.

Gabby slides off the table, then leans on two elbows to inspect Grampa’s work.
“Will you make it long to my ankles?”
“Not quite.” Grampa bends over the paper pattern he’s cutting into the shape of a coat.
“Will there be a capuz, capa to keep me warm on extra-cold days?”
“If there’s fabric left over, you will have a hood.”
“Will it have a pleat in back?”
“To make it easy when you run.” Grampa nods.
“How about a purple lining?”
“Gabrielle!” he warns. “Don’t push your luck.”


Mama comes back at four. “How’s the navy casaco coming along?” she asks as her packages slip to the floor.
Grampa coughs a bit.
Gabby twirls in front of the dusty mirror.
“Say, Pop, that is some gorgeous purple.” Mama fingers those yards of fabric draped across the cutting board.
Grampa clears his throat. “Gabby and I have decided on a different sort of casaco this year.” He says it quietly.
“Different how?”
Gabby twirls until she’s dizzy. She wishes she could race the elevator twenty-eight floors to the lobby. She would find her way to the Broadway Local, hide out in those underground tunnels…. “It’s reversible!” she hears herself blurt out. “Navy on one side and purple on the other.”


“Pop! Gabrielle gets a navy blue coat. Always,” Mama adds firmly. “With two rows of buttons and a half cinto, correia in back.”
You wanted a tangerine dress once, when you were six or so.”
Mama backs into the ancient wood chair with wheels on the bottom. She kicks off her pumps.
“Don’t you remember? It had tangerine pockets and tangerine sleeves that puffed near the shoulders,” Grampa says, “and tiny tangerine buttons…”
“…and a frilly tangerine collar!” Mama shakes her head. “It was so unlike me to want a dress like that!”
“Once in a while it’s good to try something new. A person gets tired of the same old thing all the time,” Gabby says. “Like salami.”
“Or a navy blue coat?”


“It’s such a pretty shade of purple, Mama. Gorgeous! You said so yourself.”
Mama twists her mouth around.
Remember tangerine!” Grampa points a finger in the air.
“Why do I feel outnumbered?” Mama sighs. Then she smiles, but very slowly. “I have a sneaky suspicion,” she says, “this is going to be the best purple casaco ever.”
Gabby can’t believe her ears. “You know, there just may be a dia or two when I don’t feel like purple.” She says it softly, in her worried voice.
“There just may be,” respostas Mama. “So, on those days, Gabrielle, you can turn your sleeves inside out and flip your casaco around to navy.”


And that is just what she decides to do.
posted by hornean
Lolly, aranha and Sam had a picnic on the beach.
“I’m as full as a tick,” said Lolly.
“Me too,” said Sam.
“Hot cachorros and limonada always hit the spot.”

“Now for a swim,” said Spider.
“Oh, no,” said Lolly.
“Not so soon after lunch.”
“Rats,” said Spider.

“How about a nap?” asked Sam.
“Oh, no,” said the others.
“Naps are no fun at all.”
“Very true,” said Sam.

“Want to hear a story?” asked Lolly.
“I brought along my reader.”
“A fine idea,” said her friends.
“Then let’s begin,” said Lolly.

LOLLY’S STORY

The rato saw the cat and the dog.
“I see them,”...
continue reading...
Hermit caranguejo was forever growing too big for the house on his back.

It was time to find a new house. He crawled up out of the water looking for something to hide in, where he would be seguro from the pricklepine fish.
He stepped along the shore, por the sea, in the sand...
scritch-scratch, scritch-scratch

...until he came to a rock.
Is this a house for Hermit Crab?
Turning himself around, Hermit caranguejo backed his hind legs beneath the rock. The rock would not budge. It was too heavy.
So he stepped along the shore, por the sea, in the sand...
scritch-scratch, scritch-scratch

...until he came to a rusty old...
continue reading...
added by hornean
posted by hornean
When Ludlow was born, everyone immediately noticed this shape:



It wasn’t a cute little dimple.
It wasn’t an adorable nose.


And as the rest of him grew and developed and changed
IT DIDN’T.
It only opened for food, an occasional Burp! and plenty of grumbling.


Ludlow worked in a complaint department.


At the end of the day, he felt grumpier than ever.
Night after night he came home, grumbling and growling, and went to bed,
But one night something happened.


Ludlow had a dream.
Not just any dream—THE FUNNIEST DREAM IN THE WORLD!!!
(Ludlow: Ha! Ha! Ha! Ha! Ha! Ha! Ha! Ha!)
He giggled. He guffawed....
continue reading...
posted by hornean
This morning I asked Mom, “Why can’t I have a dog?”
“Not now,” she said. “Not again.”
And not to bother her when she’s busy.

So I asked Daddy, “Why can’t I have a dog? Last ano you said I could have one when I was bigger. And I’m a lot bigger, see? So why not now?”

“Because of tight times,” said Daddy. He said I was too little to understand.
“I’m not too little,” I said.
Daddy said he’d give me a shoulder ride and tell me all about it at breakfast.

He said tight times are when everything keeps going up.
I had a balloon that did that once.
Daddy said tight times are...
continue reading...
posted by hornean
This is Arthur before he got glasses.
He looked fine, but he couldn’t see very well.
Sometimes he got headaches.

Arthur had to hold his book so close that his nose got in the way.
He couldn’t see the board.
Francine had to read Arthur the problems.
“Are you blind?” she always asked.
Francine got every problem right.
Arthur didn’t.

No one wanted to play with Arthur.

Arthur’s father and mother took him to the optometrist.
Dr. Iris tested Arthur’s eyes.
“You need glasses,” said Dr. Iris.

Arthur tried on all kinds of frames.
He chose the ones he liked best.
“You look very handsome in your...
continue reading...
posted by hornean
One Friday Miss Nelson told her class that she was going to have her tonsils out.
“I’ll be away seguinte week,” she said. “And I expect you to behave.”
“Yess, Miss Nelson,” said the kids in 207.

But at recess it was another story.
“Wow!” said the kids. “While Miss Nelson is away, we can really act up!”
“Not so fast!” said a big kid from 309. “Haven’t you heard of Viola Swamp?”
“Who?” said Miss Nelson’s kids.

“Miss Swamp is the meanest substitute teacher in the whole world,” said the big kid. “Nobody acts up when she’s around.”
“Oooh,” said Miss Nelson’s...
continue reading...
posted by hornean
In a warm and sultry forest far, far away, there once lived a mother frutas bat and her new baby.
Oh, how Mother Bat loved her soft tiny baby. “I’ll name you Stellaluna,” she crooned.
Each night, Mother Bat would carry Stellaluna clutched to her breast as she flew out to procurar for food.

One night, as Mother Bat followed the heavy scent of ripe fruit, an owl spied her. On silent wings the powerful bird swooped down upon the bats.
Dodging and shrieking, Mother Bat tried to escape, but the owl struck again and again, knocking Stellaluna into the air. Her baby wings were as limp and useless as...
continue reading...
added by hornean
posted by hornean
Owen had a fuzzy yellow blanket.
He’d had it since he was a baby.
He loved it with all his heart.

“Fuzzy goes where I go,” said Owen.
And Fuzzy did.
Upstairs, downstairs, in-between.
Inside, outside, upside down.

“Fuzzy likes what I like,” said Owen.
And Fuzzy did.
Orange juice, uva juice, chocolate milk.
Ice cream, amendoim butter, applesauce cake.

“Isn’t he getting a little old to be carrying that thing around?” asked Mrs. Tweezers. “Haven’t you heard of the Blanket Fairy?”
Owen’s parents hadn’t.
Mrs. Tweezers filled them in.

That night Owen’s parents told Owen to put Fuzzy...
continue reading...
posted by hornean
Zum. Zum buzzz. Zum. Zum. Buzz. Berlioz had been practicing for weeks, and now just when the orchestra was going to play in the village square for a gala ball, a strange buzz was coming from his double bass.
“Why now?” Berlioz said to himself.

The musicians arrived with their instruments. As Berlioz watched them climb aboard the bandwagon, all he could think about was his double bass. What if his baixo buzzed during the ball? What if the dancers stopped dancing and laughed at him?
Zum, zum, buzz. Zum, zum, buzz, he imagined.

Berlioz picked up the reins and clucked to the mule. Off they went...
continue reading...
Abbie looked out the lighthouse window. Waves washed up on the rocks below. Out at sea, a ship sailed safely by.

“Will you sail to town today, Papa?” Abbie asked.
“Yes,” Captain Burgess answered. “Mama needs medicine. The lights need oil. We need food. The weather is good now. So it’s seguro to go out in Puffin.”
“But what if you don’t get back today?” asked Abbie. “Who will take care of the lights?”
Papa smiled. “You will, Abbie.”
“Oh, no, Papa!” said Abbie. “I have never done it alone.”

“You have trimmed the wicks before,” said Papa. “You have cleaned the...
continue reading...
posted by hornean
(Helen's mother: "I hope that sopa is gone when I come back in there!")

The dia Helen gave Martha dog her alphabet soup,


something unusual happened.
The letters in the sopa went up to Martha’s brain instead of down to her stomach.

That evening, Martha spoke.
(Martha: Isn’t it time for my dinner?)


Martha’s family had many perguntas to ask her. Of course, she had a lot to tell them!
(Helen: Have you always understood what we were saying?)
(Martha: You bet! Do you want to know Benjie is really saying?)
(Helen’s father: Why don’t you came when we call?)
(Martha: You people are so bossy. Come! Sit!...
continue reading...
posted by hornean
Tanya sat restlessly on her chair por the cozinha window. For several days she had to stay in cama with a cold. But now Tanya's cold was almost gone. She was anxious to go outside and enjoy the fresh air and the arrival of spring.
"Mama, when can I go outside?" asked Tanya. Mama pulled the tray of biscuits from the forno and placed it on the counter.
"In time," she murmured. "All in good time."
Tanya gazed through the window and saw her two brothers, Ted and Jim, and Papa building the new backyard fence.
"I'm gonna talk to Grandma," she said.

Grandma was sitting in her favorito spot—the big soft...
continue reading...
posted by hornean
Once there was a farmer who lived in Mexico. He lived in a little village, in a house which had only one room.

The farmer was not happy.
“Nothing ever happens,” he said.
The people in the village thought the farmer was foolish.
“We have everything we need,” they said.

“We have a school, and a market,

and a church with an old sino that rings on Sundays. Our village is the best there is.”
“But nothing ever happens,” said the farmer.

Every morning, when the farmer woke up, the first thing he saw was the roof of his little house.
Every morning for breakfast he ate two flat cakes of ground...
continue reading...
video
leitura arco iris, arco-íris
bloopers
posted by hornean
On Thursday, when Imogene woke up, she found she had grown antlers.

Getting dressed was difficult,

and going through a door now took some thinking.

Imogene started down for breakfast…

but got hung up.
“OH!!” Imogene’s mother fainted away.

The doctor poked, and prodded, and scratched his chin.
He could find nothing wrong.

The school principal glared at Imogene but had no conselhos to offer.

Her brother Norman, consulted the encyclopedia, and then announced that Imogene had turned into a rare form of miniature elk!

Imogene’s mother fainted again and was carried upstairs to bed.

Imogene went into...
continue reading...
added by hornean