Turkey Tot

George Shannon

Book - 2013

When Turkey Tot and his friends spot some fat, juicy blackberries hanging high above their heads, Turkey Tot tries hard to figure out a way to reach them.

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Subjects
Genres
Picture books
Published
New York : Holiday House ©2013.
Language
English
Main Author
George Shannon (-)
Other Authors
Jennifer K. Mann (illustrator)
Edition
1st ed
Physical Description
1 volume (unpaged) : color illustrations ; 27 cm
ISBN
9780823423798
Contents unavailable.
Review by Horn Book Review

Shannon's comically gangly turkey is a creative thinker and excellent problem-solver, unlike pessimistic Pig, Hen, and Chick, who immediately give up on reaching some high-growing blackberries: "No sweet and juicy treat today." When Turkey Tot comes across a ball of string, his friends aren't impressed, and they pooh-pooh his idea of finding some balloons to go with the string to help them float up to the berries. ("He's been different since the day he hatched" is Hen's refrain.) Like that industrious Little Red Hen of folklore, Turkey Tot just keeps on working, not always finding what he's looking for but finding something else he may be able to put to use, like a hammer and nails or a pair of tin cans. At the end, with hard work, a little imagination, and a positive attitude, Turkey Tot succeeds, and shares his spoils with his no-longer-skeptical friends. Mann uses loose black lines with bright watercolors and digital collage in her illustrations. Big, comic-style thought balloons show the friends imagining each of the turkey's schemes failing, their round eyes with black dots somehow giving away their thoughts. With its short words and sentences and humorous repetition, this makes a good early reader as well as an entertaining storytime book. susan dove lempke (c) Copyright 2014. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A determined turkey gets the sweet, juicy, high-hanging berries. Turkey Tot is wandering about the bucolic farmstead--the reader winningly transported there via Mann's easy-handed, dark-lined, watercolor-washed artwork--where he lives with his friends Chick, Pig and Hen, in search of something to eat. Blackberries beckon, but they are too high to reach. So Turkey Tot looks about for some way to access the berries. His friends think all his ideas are cockamamie--and repeatedly so in Shannon's polyphonic refrain: "You're talking silly talk." "We can't reach the berries, and that is that." "He's been different since the day he hatched." They decide to take a nap by the pond. But Turkey Tot will not be discouraged. Perhaps his first few ideas are a little off note--one has him finding a ball of string to which, he figures, he will tie a balloon and float Pig up to berryland--but he finally manages to wire all his different schemes together and snag the berries. Then he shares them with his uninspired comrades, which is more than the Little Red Hen would have done. Good for Turkey Tot: freethinking, resolved, generous. Let's hope that when November rolls around, Turkey Tot has become the farm's mascot, not its dinner. (Picture book. 3-6)]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.