While three bears are away from home, Goldilocks ventures inside their house, tastes their porridge, tries their chairs, and finally falls asleep in Baby Bear's bed
As Goldilocks walks through the forest, she spies a cottage in a clearing. The curious little girl peeks in the window and sees that nobody is home, so she steps inside and takes a look around. What Goldilocks doesn't know is that the cottage belongs to three bears, and they don't like uninvited guests
Illustrations featuring elements of the modernism movement in art provide a new look to this traditional tale of the uninvited visit of a young girl to the home of a family of bears in a story that includes information on designers
Not too dura. Not too suave. Just right. The Oso family is going out for a stroll, and Rubia has her eye on their empyt casita. A nice bowl of sopa, a comfortable chair, a perfecta little bed ... Who wouldn't want to open la puerta and come in? A fabuloso new flavor and a happy sorpresa ending make this familiar tale all new
Aloo-ki glances up from fishing and sees her sled dogs floating off on an ice floe. She races after them and comes upon an igloo. Being a curious girl, she goes inside only to find no one home. That's because the polar bear family who lives there is out walking while their breakfast cools off.
Goldilocks & the Three Bears
This illustrations came from:
Wadsworth, Wallace C. The Real Story Book. Margaret Evans Price, illustrator. Chicago: Rand McNally & Company, 1927
An original American Sign Language adaptation that incorporates facial expressions, body movements, and signed language to retell the story of Goldilocks and the three bears.