Thunder-Boomer by Shutta Crum, illustrated by Carol Thompson.
This picture book starts with a hot summer day, filled with tractors plowing, no breeze, and a panting dog. Then a small breeze comes, bringing with it dark threatening clouds. The family runs to get the laundry off the line and the chickens in the hen house. Then with a rumble of thunder, the rain comes. Dad is forced back into the storm to rescue one wayward chicken. As the storm worsens, the wind blows, the lightning crackles and the thunder – Booms! Everyone in the house, including the chicken. After a bout of hail, the sun returns and Maizie, the chicken, heads off alone again. When the little girl checks on her, she gets a surprise.
This picture book perfectly captures the power of a big thunderstorm, the wonder of the wind, the dance of hail, and then that amazing clearing afterwards. One can almost hear the tentative birdsong and the dripping afterwards. Filled with sound words, young readers will enjoy making noises but soon will be caught up in the drama of the storm. Thompson’s illustrations are lively and dramatic, offering both smaller detailed pictures and larger images that capture the action. The engaging inclusion of a lost pair of Dad’s underwear in the storm helps to keep the storm from being too powerful for young children.
Appropriate for ages 4-6, this book is a great summer book to share. It reads aloud well, just make sure to leave time for plenty of putt-putting tractors, booms of thunder, and clucking chickens in the audience.
