The croc who rocked

Laura Casella

Book - 2018

All alone, in a quiet part of the jungle, Little Croc hatches. He may be small, but he has a big voice and loves to sing. But the other animals don't like his snap-snap song and send him away. As time passes, he becomes a big croc, and his song gets better and louder, but he is lonely. He asks some birds to teach him their song, hoping the other animals might accept him. All goes well until he gets carried away, snap-snaps in the middle of the song, and is sent away. As he sings sadly to himself by the river, his song attracts an unexpected crowd of admirers, who finally join in on the music.

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jE/Casella
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Subjects
Genres
Children's stories Pictorial works
Picture books
Published
[Adelaide, Australia] : Starfish Bay Children's Books, an imprint of Starfish Bay Publishing 2018.
Language
English
Main Author
Laura Casella (author)
Physical Description
1 volume (unpaged) : colour illustrations ; 26 x 27 cm
ISBN
9781760360528
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

One morning, "in a very, very quiet part of the jungle," some crocodile eggs "softly" hatchexcept for one "very happy little croc" who snaps his jaws as he sings and dances. Not everybody understands that when the croc hears that internal beat, he needs to move his feet. The frog, the monkey, and the snake all tell him to "Shhhhh!" Wee Croc is sad. Eventually he grows into a large croc sadly swimming day after day. His life changes when two birds land on his tail; they offer to clean his teeth by eating the food stuck in them. When Croc explains how sad he is, the birds offer to teach him "their tweety song" in exchange for some food. In an instant, Croc has both music and new friends (and cleaner teeth, but this detail receives no notice). Now that he has a song to tweet, he can teach it to the other animals. It's fine as long as he tweets, but when he starts snapping those jaws again, they run away. But the other crocs in the river flock around and sing his song with him all night long. Casella's expressive pictures dance appealingly all around the page, as does Croc's jazz-infused song, set in a faux hand-lettered typeface. Unfortunately, the book's message seems a bit muddled. Are animals (and people) only to be friends with their own kind? Upbeat and offbeat at the same time. (Picture book. 3-6) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.