ON THE LOOSE IN WASHINGTON DC

A Find-the-Animals Children's Book

ALSO SEE:
On the Loose in New York City, On the Loose in Philadelphia and On the Loose in Boston.

About the Book

on the loose in washington dc

With simple rhymes and colorful, highly detailed images, cartoonist Sage Stossel creates a "Where's Waldo?"-style hit, setting animals free from the National Zoo and challenging children to find them in settings from the National Mall to Georgetown, Dupont Circle, and the Air and Space Museum. Children will have a ball helping the keeper find a monkey at the Library of Congress, a kangaroo at the Supreme Court, or a Hippo in the Tidal Basin! Over 100 animals are hiding cleverly in favorite DC locations in this colorfully-illustrated rhyming picture book.

Reception for On the Loose in Washington, DC:

Recommended by Mommy Nearest D.C. as one of 7 Books All D.C. Area Kids Should Have on Their Shelves: "You'll get a chuckle over all the satirical choices made by the artist, and your kids will adore finding the cuddly animals hidden among major Washington, D.C. landmarks."

"Beautifully illustrated, intelligently conceived, brilliantly witty and entertaining... If you are visiting, or if you live here, or if you just want to take memories with you, On The Loose in Washington, DC is the book to own."
Tom Edsall, New York Times Columnist, former Washington Post political reporter (1981-2006), and author, most recently of The Age of Austerity

on the loose in boston

"Antelopes in Dupont Circle and kangaroos at the Supreme Court? In this funny and whimsical picture book, which offers readers both an engaging story and a hidden-object game, Sage Stossel turns the city of Washington into a giant playground, with benevolent beasts hiding just out of eyesight in every neighborhood. Like all the best children's books, On the Loose in Washington, DC takes the familiar and transforms it into something wondrous."
Carolyn Parkhurst, bestselling author of The Dogs of Babel (a New York Times Notable Book), Lost and Found, The Nobodies Album, and the 2010 children's book Cooking with Henry and Elliebelly

"This imaginative book is as much fun for parents as it is for children. Sage Stossel is a longtime political cartoonist, and older readers will enjoy her clever sense of satire: a donkey and elephant tussle outside the Capitol, while a kangaroo approaches the Supreme Court. Younger readers will love finding the animals. And people of all ages will delight in seeing the nation's capital as it should be—a cheerful city with beautiful buildings, blue skies, and all kinds of happy creatures."
Jennie Rothenberg Gritz, Smithsonian Magazine senior editor and Washington, D.C., parent

Exciting News!--The first book in the series, On the Loose in Boston, has been selected by Boston Mayor Marty Walsh for his Youth Reading List.

Review of first book in the series, On the Loose in Boston, at Boston Mamas.com:
Not only are the illustrations awesome, Stossel engages the reader with challenging searches for the Franklin Park Zoo animals artistically hidden among her drawings, and she entertains us with a rhyming plot that tickles the tongue with wonderful vocabulary. Read more...

Coloring

on the loose in bostonTry coloring in some of the scenes from On the Loose in Washington, DC. In the book, these pages are in full color, but the versions here are black and white so you can print and color them however you like:--

Sleeping Panda | Animals at the computer | Nationals Fans | The White House | The Capitol Building | The Supreme Court | The Air and Space Museum | The Lincoln Memorial | The Tidal Basin/Jefferson Memorial | The Library of Congress | Dupont Circle | Georgetown | The Museum of Natural History | The National Zoo | Politics & Prose Books | Kramerbooks & Afterwords Cafe

Or, try your hand at animal mazes, a DC Quiz, a zoo animal wordfind, a Washington DC wordfind, making your own DC book, a Washington word jumble, and more...

About the Author | On the Loose in Washington | On the Loose in Boston | On the Loose in New York City | On the Loose in Philadelphia | Contact