A mysterious egg

Stacy McAnulty

Book - 2016

During a summer at his grandparents' dinosaur museum and dig, the Dinosaur Education Center of Wyoming, Frank, aided by his cousin Sam and cat Saurus, cares for a newly-hatched dinosaur while trying to keep its existence secret, both from his grandparents and from the neighbors.

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Subjects
Published
New York : Random House [2016]
Language
English
Main Author
Stacy McAnulty (-)
Other Authors
Mike Boldt (illustrator)
Item Description
"A Stepping Stone book."
Physical Description
104 pages : illustrations ; 21 cm
ISBN
9780553521917
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Frank loves visiting his grandparents in the summer. His grandmother is a famous paleontologist and, along with his grandfather, owns the Dinosaur Education Center of Wyoming. A bad case of sunburn keeps Frank stuck inside with his obnoxious cousin Samantha, and just when he reaches his breaking point, Gram comes back to pick everyone up to show off a startling discovery: a fossilized egg. Or is it? Late at night, the egg hatches a real baby dinosaur, which Frank names Peanut. He tries to keep Peanut a secret, but an emergency forces his hand. A cliff-hanger Gram has found something else sets the scene for the next book in the series. Frank is wry, funny, and charming, and his convincing first-person narrative captures the spirit of the adventure. The characters, while seeming stock at first, evolve into characters who, if not very complex, have their own personalities. There will always be kids fascinated by dinosaurs, and this is just the series for them.--Scanlon, Donna Copyright 2016 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by School Library Journal Review

Gr 2-4-Dinosaur-loving kids will enjoy reading this series starter. Frank is spending his summer with his grandparents and his cousin, Samantha, at a dinosaur education center in Wyoming. Close to the center is a dig in progress, and his grandmother discovers an intact dinosaur egg, a rare and exciting find. Frank, whose first book was an ABC dinosaur book, has been fascinated with the giant reptiles for his entire life, and he's thrilled. Unfortunately, Samantha, not a true dinosaur fan, is less than enthused. In the middle of the night after the find, Frank discovers Samantha with a hammer in her hand about to break open the egg. Frank stops her just as the egg begins to hatch. Soon, a baby dinosaur emerges. Frank hides the dinosaur in his room as he and Samantha try to figure out a way to keep the baby dino safe from the cattle rancher who owns the land the egg was found on. Featuring short chapters interspersed with black-and-white illustrations, this fantastical adventure will hold readers' interest. VERDICT Though not as charming as Kate Klimo's "Dragon Keepers" series (Random), this is a fine supplemental addition to chapter book collections.-Kathy Kirchoefer, Henderson County Public Library, NC © Copyright 2015. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

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

In this series kickoff for dinophiles (and who isn't one?), a Wyoming dig yields an egg that's not exactly fossilized. Despite having to cope with obnoxious cousin Samantha and snoopy Aaron from the adjacent cattle ranch, 9-year-old Frank is thrilled to be summering with his grandparents at their dinosaur museum and dig site. Life takes a particularly exciting turn when his paleontologist grandmother finds a stone egg on ranch land. It not only becomes a bone of contention between her and Aaron's avaricious dad, but hatches in the night, leaving Frank and Sam scrambling to keep little "Peanut"depicted in the frequent ink-and-wash illustrations as a puppylike hadrosaur with soulful eyes and a stubby tailsecret from the grown-ups. Ultimately, though, the creature must be driven to the vet after chowing down on snack food, and while the adults are gone on that errand, the children work out a way to share ownership. McAnulty keeps characters and situations uncomplicated, and if self-absorbed Samantha comes off as more of a liability than an asset here, perhaps she'll have a chance to redeem herself in future episodes. Adventures in dinosaur husbandrya bit bland but palatable fare for younger independent readers. (glossary) (Science fantasy. 7-9) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.