Carnival of Animals by Sid Fleischman

Carnival of Animals

Sid Fleischman
48 pages
Greenwillow Books
Aug 2000
Hardcover
All Children WSBN
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From Publishers Weekly A half dozen newly minted tall tales chronicle the merry havoc wreaked by a "no-account little tornado" that touches down on Barefoot Mountain. In the opening story ("The Windblown Child"), a group of friendly woodland animals rally round an odd, pink, hairlessDor featherless, they can't tellDcreature ("It could be a newborn pig" one observes) who blows in from the nearby mountain. She turns out to be a rare "Sidehill Clinger" (her disproportionate legs, ideal for climbing steep slopes, are the giveaway). In a neat little coda, her missing fleece turns up in the final story atop the head of a bald farmer. Other memorable characters include the star of "Emperor Floyd," a rooster, who develops insomnia and a taste for fireflies in the storm's aftermath and ends up a porch light, and "Stumblefrog," a clumsy frog who finds a torn sack of Mexican jumping beans, swallows them, then leaps and soars with the best of them. Fleischman (Bandit's Moon) displays his nimble wit with descriptions of a gale that shakes trucks "like dice" and a sly hawk named Thump Oswald who is "slick as bear grease." The glee with which he relates his outrageous yarns is infectious, and Hafner (the Lunch Bunnies books) seems to have caught it, too. Overflowing with the critters and varmints the stories conjure up, her jaunty watercolor and pen-and-ink vignettes create a jaunty counterpoint. Ages 7-up. (Sept.) Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title. From School Library Journal Grade 2-4-Fleischman, a master of the tall tale, presents six short stories about the odd happenings at Barefoot Mountain after a "no-account little tornado" passes through. Some of the unusual creatures introduced include a Sidehill Clinger whose legs are different lengths for ease in climbing mountains; a rooster who eats too many fireflies and begins to glow in the dark; and Webster, aka "Stumblefrog," whose leaping difficulties are solved when he discovers a sack of Mexican jumping beans. Intended for perhaps a slightly younger audience than the author's "McBroom" series, these shorter, simpler tales feature the same broad humor and quirky characterizations. Hafner's cheerful illustrations, done in watercolors, colored pencils, and pen and ink, add to the comic quality of the book. A good choice for children between beginning chapter books and more ambitious fare, and a solid addition for most collections.
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About this book
Pages 48
Publisher Greenwillow Books
Published 2000
Readers 1