Tough Chicks by Cece Meng, illustrated by Melissa Suber
From the minute they hatch, Penny, Polly and Molly are chicks of a different feather. They wrestle worms, race bugs, and dive for flies. And they move at a fast pace with a "Peep, peep, zoom, zip, cheep." All of the farm animals beg mother hen to make her chicks behave and be good. But mother hen knows that her chicks are good. Even the farmer gets upset when he finds the chicks under the hood of his tractor. The animals on the farm put together an educational program for the chicks to help them be more normal, but with each lesson the chicks look at things from a completely different angle. When a runaway tractor heads for the henhouse, the chicks just might be more useful than expected!
Happily targeting the role of cute young girls in a family and society, this book skewers the social norm with a playful spirit. These three chicks are just like many girls who enjoy action, motors and little danger and refuse to move at a sedate, ladylike pace. Meng’s text is just as lively as the chicks themselves, zooming along at a great pace. Suber’s art is equally lively with crotchety pigs, perturbed fowl, and goggle-eyed sheep.
Read this one last in a story time, which is the greatest compliment a book can ever have! This shouldn’t be saved for those chicken story times, make sure you use it as one of those rainy-day books that you pull out to brighten things up. Appropriate for ages 3-5.
Oh, my — I love everything about this: concept, title, EVERYTHING. My mother doesn’t usually read “talking animal” types of stories to her preschoolers, but I’m sending her a copy IMMEDIATELY.
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