Synopses & Reviews
Ideal for Easter and springtime, an exuberantly illustrated picture book by a
New York Times bestselling artist!
Little Chicks mother is all cluck and no action. Mama knows her old nest isnt the cozy home she and her brood need. But whenever she vows to start building a new house, shes distracted—by sweety-meaty worms, crunchy-munchy crickets, or picky-pecky corn. Luckily, her Little Chick is an industrious sort. While the rest of his family are stuffing themselves silly, hes quietly working, bit by bit, day by day.
Janice N. Harringtons retelling of a little-known Central African story is perfectly matched with Brian Pinkneys jazzy depiction of a can-do little critter.
Review
"Harringtons (Roberto Walks Home) storytelling background and careful investigation of African sources can be seen in the multitude of sound words and Lonkundo vocabulary she includes. Watching Little Chick succeed where his parent has stumbled will thrill young readers."--Publishers Weekly.
Review
"Based on a Central African fable, 'The Hens House,' this story has strong roots in the oral tradition. 'Chilly-cold' chicks complain with little peo-peo-peos, and Mama Nsoso steps with a cwa-cwa-cwa and clucks pruck! pruck! Every night Mama tells her chicks theyll build an ilombe, a new house, the next day. But while she gets distracted by tasty worms and crickets (Mama is the first little pig), Busy-Busy Chick works. Pinkneys animated chickens, scurrying and fluttering in great swaths of marigold and orange, impart abundant joy." --The New York Times Book Review
"Harringtons (Roberto Walks Home) storytelling background and careful investigation of African sources can be seen in the multitude of sound words and Lonkundo vocabulary she includes. Watching Little Chick succeed where his parent has stumbled will thrill young readers."--Publishers Weekly. "Well-told and beautifully illustrated." -- Kirkus Reviews
"A good addition to units on fables, farm animals, or African culture, and an enjoyable story in general." - School Library Journal
"Former childrens librarian Harrington knows how to tell a story, and she uses repetitive elements and refrains to keep children engaged and participating. Pinkney here moves away from his usual structured scratchboard illustrations to create free and energetic watercolors in bright yellow, orange, and red, capturing a feeling of motion with his loose black lines." -- The Horn Book
"Pinkney provides impressionistic swirls of color that bleed out of the figures of Mama Nsoso and her baby chicks, washing into backgrounds and giving a toasty warmth, as well as a mystical timelessness, to the story that will invite kids to browse through it independently." -- Booklist
"Utterly charming." - BCCB
Synopsis
Ideal for Easter and springtime, an exuberantly illustrated picture book by a New York Times bestselling artist
Little Chick's mother is all cluck and no action. Mama knows her old nest isn't the cozy home she and her brood need. But whenever she vows to start building a new house, she's distracted--by sweety-meaty worms, crunchy-munchy crickets, or picky-pecky corn. Luckily, her Little Chick is an industrious sort. While the rest of his family are stuffing themselves silly, he's quietly working, bit by bit, day by day.
Janice N. Harrington's retelling of a little-known Central African story is perfectly matched with Brian Pinkney's jazzy depiction of a can-do little critter.
About the Author
Janice N. Harrington received the Ezra Jack Keats New Writer Award for her first picture book,
Going North, and a
Parents Choice Award for
The Chicken-Chasing Queen of Lamar County. She lives in Champaign, Illinois.
Brian Pinkney's awards include two Caldecott Honors, four Coretta Scott King Honors and a Coretta Scott King Award, and the Boston Globe-Horn Book Award. He is the illustrator of the New York Times bestseller Sit-In: How Four Friends Stood Up by Sitting Down, written by his wife, Andrea Pinkney. He lives in Brooklyn, New York.