Copyright Date:
2015
Edition Date:
2015
Release Date:
03/15/15
Illustrator:
Leng, Qin,
Pages:
1 volume (unpaged)
ISBN:
1-7714-7065-8
ISBN 13:
978-1-7714-7065-0
Dewey:
E
LCCN:
2014945831
Dimensions:
24 x 27 cm.
Language:
English
Reviews:
School Library Journal
(Tue Sep 01 00:00:00 CDT 2015)
PreS-Gr 2 When Benny's mother asks him to put his plate in the sink, the boy wants to know "what would you do it I said no?" The imaginative chain of cause-and-effect gets wilder and wilder as Benny quizzes his mother about how she'd respond to a rapidly escalating sequence of misbehavior. Benny's hypothetical high jinks seem more mean-spirited than mischievous; he smashes plates, taunts baby penguins, ties lions' tails together, and yells bad words. Some readers may be taken aback by the mother's professed willingness to give her son to the zoo or sell him to the circus. Ably executed pastel-toned illustrations show a smug-faced mother and son in increasingly fantastical situations. VERDICT Some children may enjoy the outlandish naughtiness and far-fetched consequences. Many readers will find Benny's hypothetical misbehavior disagreeable, and his mother's responses unsettling. Rachel Anne Mencke, St. Matthew's Parish School, Pacific Palisades, CA
Horn Book
(Sat Aug 01 00:00:00 CDT 2015)
When Mom asks Benny to clear his plate, his reply--"What would you do if I said no?"--prompts a conversational tennis match ("I'd tell you that..."; "What would you do if...?"). Fergus gets the mom right: she engages Benny without indulging him. Leng keeps up with the fantasy ("I'd send you to the moon!") if not the characters' emotional responses.
Word Count:
649
Reading Level:
3.9
Interest Level:
K-3
Accelerated Reader:
reading level: 3.9
/ points: 0.5
/ quiz: 172258
/ grade: Lower Grades
Reading Counts!:
reading level:6.5 /
points:1.0 /
quiz:Q65488
Lexile:
AD960L
"Benny, please put your plate in the sink."
"What would you do if I said no?" asked Benny.
"I'd tell you that just saying no is rude," replied his mom. "Then I'd explain why it's important to help out around the house."
"Well," said Benny, "what would you do if I said that I liked being rude, that I didn't care about helping out around the house, and then I chucked my plate across the room?"
Excerpted from And What If I Won't? by Maureen Fergus, Qin Leng
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.
When Benny's mother asks him to put his dirty plate in the sink, he responds by asking: "What would you do if I said no?" Her answer is predictable, but not enough for Benny, whose "what if?" line of questioning continues as he dreams up increasingly naughty behavior: What if he threw his plate at the wall? What if he jumped on the couch in muddy rain boots? What if he tore pages out of library books? Playing on their shared sense of humor and imagination, and showing more than a little bit of indulgence, his mother's answers become equally outrageous. She sends Benny off to the zoo, sells him to the circus, and even happily shoots him off into outer space as punishment for his behavior. Digitally rendered illustrations with a loose, expressive line play out each imagined scenario, with differing color treatment making the distinction between the real and the fantastic clear. The story's circular ending brings it all back home with a clever--and entirely reasonable--punchline.