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  • Guess How Much I Love You
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  • Guess How Much I Love You is a best-selling series of picture books written by Sam McBratney and illustrated by Anita Jeram. The stories focus on the adventures of two hares in a meadow, Little Nutbrown Hare and his father, Big Nutbrown Hare. The original book in the series was first published in the mid 90s, and its success led to a number of follow-ups in the late 2000s. The original book has also been released in a number of formats, including pop-up, sweetheart edition and baby book. The stories have also been adapted for children's theatre, as well as animated storybooks.
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dbkwik:all-the-tropes/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:allthetropes/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
abstract
  • Guess How Much I Love You is a best-selling series of picture books written by Sam McBratney and illustrated by Anita Jeram. The stories focus on the adventures of two hares in a meadow, Little Nutbrown Hare and his father, Big Nutbrown Hare. The original book in the series was first published in the mid 90s, and its success led to a number of follow-ups in the late 2000s. The original book has also been released in a number of formats, including pop-up, sweetheart edition and baby book. The stories have also been adapted for children's theatre, as well as animated storybooks. The books in the series are as follows: * Guess How Much I Love You (1994) * Colors Everywhere (2008) * Let's Play in the Snow (2008) * When I'm Big (2008) * A Surprise for the Nutbrown Hares (2009) * The Adventures of Little Nutbrown Hare (Upcoming, August 2012 - 72 pages, compilation volume featuring four new stories) In 2011, an Animated Adaptation, subtitled The Adventures of Little Nutbrown Hare was commissioned by SLR Productions and began airing on Disney Junior in a number of non-U.S. markets. The program began airing in the U.S. on March 23, 2012 with the premiere of the 24/7 Disney Junior network. The creators of the program employed a set of complex technical processses to give the program the appearance that a watercolor storybook had been brought to life on-screen. Notably, it's probably one of the few shows on Disney Junior that doesn't seem to an Edutainment Show by not actively trying to teach anything, not even aesops or pro-social values.