Chicks rule

Sudipta Bardhan-Quallen

Book - 2019

Illustrations and simple, rhyming text follow chicks of all ilks as they work together to puzzle out how to respond to a sign forbidding chicks from attending the Rocket Club meeting.

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Subjects
Genres
Stories in rhyme
Picture books
Published
New York : Abrams Books for Young Readers 2019.
Language
English
Main Author
Sudipta Bardhan-Quallen (author)
Other Authors
Renée Kurilla (author)
Physical Description
30 unnumbered pages : color illustrations ; 28 cm
ISBN
9781419734144
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

This picture book with rhyming text shows a variety of chicks (here, little chickens, but meant to represent girls and women) uniting in protest against exclusion. In eye-catching primary colors, the first pages show Nerdy Chick, outfitted in oversize glasses and a space-themed sweater, building a small rocket ship, taking it to her local rocket club, and being turned away by its No Chicks Allowed sign. She's not the only one excluded, though. A bevy of barred chicks including biker chicks, rocker chicks, coding chicks, baker chicks, and sporty chicks march behind Nerdy Chick, organize, and eventually build their own rocket ship that blasts into outer space. Illustrations cleverly accessorize the chicks to show their interests or identity (in a nice touch, one chick wears a hijab). The sentences are simple, though the phrasing may be hard for little kids to understand, as in Chicks reflecting. Chicks conceiving. However, the upbeat tone will speak to all, as will the inclusive message that the chicks tape to the control panel of their rocket ship: Everyone allowed! --Connie Fletcher Copyright 2019 Booklist

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

PreS-Gr 2-This inspirational picture book demonstrates how girls can accomplish anything when they value their unique abilities and depend on one another in the face of opposition. In the opening panels, one enthusiastic chick builds a paper rocket and is met with a "No Chicks Allowed" sign on the Rocket Club door. Vivid and expressive digital illustrations turn these first wordless scenes into a series of emotions that set the stage for what follows: excitement, jubilation, confusion, and anger. Colorful spreads show how chicks from all walks of life will not be denied in pursuing their interests, which include riding bikes, playing music, playing sports, coding, and art. As each chick is described, the rocket chick leads the line and others follow through a country landscape until they arrive at a barn door. "Though they've followed separate tracks/a common hurdle holds them back." Once they're at the barn door, there is simply a glimpse of a rooster's coxcomb and a word bubble that reiterates, "No Chicks Allowed." Unsatisfied, the rocket chick crosses out "no" on the sign from the Rocket Club she's been carrying, and the chicks band together to create something magnificent. Although the chicks are not human, there is an attempt to express diversity through the colors of feathers, their interests, and their dress. For example, one of the chicks wears a hijab. Repetition, rhyming, and alliteration enhance the flow of the story and make this an excellent candidate for sharing aloud. VERDICT A fun and lively read-aloud about empowering girls, and a splendid example of what a community can accomplish when everyone is included.-Rachel Zuffa, Case High School, Racine, WI © Copyright 2019. 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

When a bespectacled yellow chick arrives, toy rocket under one wing, at the coop that houses the Rocket Club ("the coolest club in the galaxy") to find a "No Chicks Allowed!!!" sign, it spawns a feathered revolution. As she stalks past "Cool chicks and nerdy chicks / Quiet chicks and wordy chicks / Biker chicks and rocker chicks / Science chicks and soccer chicks" standing outside other clubhouse-coops with similarly unwelcoming signs, they begin to fall in line after her till she's got a mammoth following. Dressed in all sorts of outfits that indicate their professions and interests and carrying placards ("NO MORE"; "Enough Is Enough"; "Give Chicks a Chance," reads one held aloft by a hijabi chick), they arrive at a large white barn, where they are rebuffed again. "But chicks are strong and chicks are smart," and working together they build a real rocket that proves that "Chicks can conquer anything!" Appropriately for her theme, Bardhan-Quallen's rhyming text has the rhythmic quality of a chant. Kurilla supplies paneled pictures of stubby little chicks of many colors, all frowning adorably with determination. Of course, for the joke to work, caregivers will have to explain to young readers that "chick" is a sexist term for "woman," which takes some of the air out of it. Nevertheless, there's no questioning its energy.I am woman, hear me peep. (Picture book. 3-6) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.