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5 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Never too young
As the father of a three-year old learning to read, I was completely dismayed at the endless number of inane, cutesy, and vapid titles targeted towards pre-school readers. How can we expect books about anthropomorphized talking animals and insects to teach our children anything useful about the world we live in? Last time I checked, mother hens did not wear aprons,...
Published on March 26, 2006 by viktor_57

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3.0 out of 5 stars Not quite
This book was not what I wanted to teach children about saving money. This book would be better used for an activity on rhyming words.
Published 9 months ago by penguinsteph


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3.0 out of 5 stars Not quite, April 18, 2011
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This review is from: Money, Money, Honey Bunny! (Bright & Early Books(R)) (Hardcover)
This book was not what I wanted to teach children about saving money. This book would be better used for an activity on rhyming words.
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3 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars NOT about judicious money management!, February 18, 2008
By 
bored99 (Hamden, CT USA) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)   
This review is from: Money, Money, Honey Bunny! (Bright & Early Books(R)) (Hardcover)
Although this book is very cute, it does not teach money management In a way that my children (ages 2-5) can grasp. On the first page or two, Honey Bunny receives money from a few sources, then proceeds to spend and spend and spend and spend until the very last page, in which she magically still has money left to save. So although the book does -mention- the word savings, it presents it in a context of "spend as much as you want, and there will be plenty left over later."
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1 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars just ok, May 4, 2009
By 
E. Kim (Mountain View, CA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Money, Money, Honey Bunny! (Bright & Early Books(R)) (Hardcover)
Bought book b/c reviews looked like it would be a nice story to teach value of money. Story is about a bunny that spends all her money on a treat for her then her family and friends. Did not really give the point I had noped. Cute rhymes that the kids like but I had different expectations. Oh well.
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5 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Never too young, March 26, 2006
By 
viktor_57 "viktor_57" (Fairview, Your Favorite State, USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Money, Money, Honey Bunny! (Bright & Early Books(R)) (Hardcover)
As the father of a three-year old learning to read, I was completely dismayed at the endless number of inane, cutesy, and vapid titles targeted towards pre-school readers. How can we expect books about anthropomorphized talking animals and insects to teach our children anything useful about the world we live in? Last time I checked, mother hens did not wear aprons, ladybugs did not dispense homey pearls of wisdom, and frogs did not yearn for friendship from other species. I know many people believe such stories feed the imagination, encourage creativity, etc., but then so do Ulysses and Also sprach Zarathustra, and few would recommend teaching Joyce or Nietzsche to pre-schoolers. Considering my biases, I thought "Money, Money, Honey Bunny!" was simply another superfluous exercise in puerile nonsense, but I was pleasantly mistaken.

Ms. Sadler must be a free-market capitalist at heart, for she has managed to capture its virtues in this simple tale of commerce, goods, and the pleasures of free trade. Honey Bunny, the title character, knows the value of saving. More important, however, she knows that money is not an end unto itself, but a means of trading goods and services using a common currency, allowing for wealth to spread from buyer to seller to manufacturer to investor and so on in the glorious cycle of money. How does she show this? Not with models of monetary theory, or lectures on microeconomics, but by earning, saving, judiciously spending, and then keeping a portion to invest in her own future. Ms. Sadler tells Honey Bunny's story in bouncy, rhyming couplets, accompanied by clear, colorful and often humorous illustrations by Mr. Bollen. My child delights in declaiming the catchy, singsongy verse and laughs at the cartoons, and I declaim and laugh with him. He thinks he is merely enjoying the simple tale of a cartoon rabbit, but I know that the seeds of free-market capitalism are being sown, watered, and grown within my progeny, guaranteeing his future prosperity and the prosperity of all in the world economy.
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Money, Money, Honey Bunny! (Bright & Early Books(R))
Money, Money, Honey Bunny! (Bright & Early Books(R)) by Marilyn Sadler (Hardcover - January 24, 2006)
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