Smash! Crash!
Smash! Crash!
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Perma-Bound from Publisher's Hardcover ©2008--
Publisher's Hardcover ©2008--
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Simon & Schuster, Inc.
Just the Series: Jon Scieszka's Trucktown   

Series and Publisher: Jon Scieszka's Trucktown   

Annotation: Best friends Jack Truck and Dump Truck Dan love to smash things but sometimes their antics get them into trouble.
 
Reviews: 6
Catalog Number: #23794
Format: Perma-Bound from Publisher's Hardcover
Copyright Date: 2008
Edition Date: 2008 Release Date: 01/08/08
Illustrator: Shannon, David,, Long, Loren,, Gordon, David,
Pages: 1 volume (unpaged)
ISBN: Publisher: 1-416-94133-9 Perma-Bound: 0-605-17543-8
ISBN 13: Publisher: 978-1-416-94133-0 Perma-Bound: 978-0-605-17543-3
Dewey: E
LCCN: 2008270441
Dimensions: 26 cm.
Subject Heading:
Trucks. Fiction.
Language: English
Reviews:
ALA Booklist (Thu Nov 01 00:00:00 CDT 2007)

Like preschoolers at play on the floor, this big, wild, noisy, rambunctious picture book is packed with action as two friends, Jack Truck and Dump Truck Dan, hit the road. They charge at Cement Mixer Melvin, play pirates with Gabriella Garbage Truck, and smack, whack, and stack. Unlike many truck books for the very young child, this one has a simple story: a big, scary voice in the background turns out to be Wrecking Crane Rosie, who takes the two friends along to help her smash a building. The truck friends love it, and so will kids. Some of the neon-colored computer graphics seem too packed and busy at times, but the trucks' expressive faces, with headlights as eyes, are lots of  fun, as are the endpapers, which picture individual vehicles relating tough comments, such as "Out of my way." As the first in Jon Scieszka's Trucktown series of high-energy books for preschoolers, this bodes well for the numerous titles to follow.

School Library Journal

PreS-Gr 1-Scieszka teamed up with Shannon, Long, and Gordon to create a vibrant locale inhabited by personified vehicles. In this rollicking escapade, best pals Jack Truck and Dump Truck Dan are in the mood for smashing and crashing. They search for other friends to join in, including Cement Mixer Melvin, Monster Truck Max, and Grater Kat, but they are all too busy working. Although they interrupt their friends' tasks, Jack and Dan's smashing and crashing ultimately helps each truck get the job done. Throughout the story, the comrades continually flee from a menacing shadow. It turns out to be Wrecking Crane Rosie, who demands that they follow her; Jack and Dan are surprised to discover she needs their help to smash and crash a building. Told in brief catchy language, the story zooms along with plenty of pizzazz and action. Children will want to jump in and repeat the "Smash! Crash!" refrain. The winning full-color digital artwork adds plenty of personality to the characters and perfectly suits the text. A foldout page illustrates Rosie's imposing height, and endpapers introduce the cast. Entertaining as a group read-aloud or one-on-one selection, this book is sure to be a hit with truck lovers. Be on the lookout for more "Trucktown" adventures.-Lynn K. Vanca, Akron-Summit County Public Library, Richfield, OH Copyright 2008 Reed Business Information.

Horn Book (Fri Aug 01 00:00:00 CDT 2008)

Truck buddies Jack and Dan live to wreck havoc. They're not villains, though: their energy is channeled into helping friends build a play pirate fort and demolishing an old building. It can be hard to tell what's going on in the discombobulatingly frantic illustrations, but kids who like this sort of thing will enjoy all the smashing and crashing.

Starred Review for Publishers Weekly

Little gearheads will rally to this demolition derby, carried out by a gregarious all-motorized cast. Jack Truck, a red flatbed with chrome exhaust stacks, and best friend Dump Truck Dan, a blue guy with a yellow cab and mud flaps, adore the smash and crash of work in progress. To stir up noisy trouble, “Jack and Dan charge Cement Mixer Melvin,” who mixes sand and water for his job. “No. I can’t get messy,” Melvin tells them, but with a “smash-crash!” mischievous Jack and Dan leave him covered in gray glop. The friends help Monster Truck Max stack orange-and-white oil drums, and they assist baby-pink Gabriella Garbage Truck (who has a teddy bear tied to her front bumper) in building a pirate fort from an old boat. Scieszka (Math Curse) revs readers up with gear-grinding noise and rowdy antics that echo Pixar’s animated Cars. Celebrated illustrators Shannon, Long and Gordon embed mechanical shapes in their punchy display type, and they contribute panoramic vistas of Jack and Dan’s playgrounds: freshly dug foundations, vast junkyards and dusty lots with buildings slated for destruction. In a nod to Scieszka’s “Guys Read” initiative, most of the machines are male, but the burliest of all is Wrecking Crane Rosie, so tall she requires a vertical gatefold. Heads and taillights above legions of other truck titles, this smash-crash series opener is bound to be a hit. Ages 3-7. (Jan.)

Kirkus Reviews

<p>The irrepressible Scieszka has set his sites on entertaining a younger crowd and getting them (boys especially) hooked on the joys of reading. Best friends Jack Truck and Dump Truck Dan love to spend their days smashing and crashing. First they demolish a construction site; then they have a little too much messy fun with their friend Cement Mixer Melvin. On the construction side, they help Monster Truck Max stack barrels and build an amazing pirate fort for Gabriella Garbage Truck and Grader Kat. But all day they have been dogged by a mysterious shadowa"are they in trouble for all their mischievous destruction? No. It's just Wrecking Crane Rosie offering a positive outlet for their destructive tendencies. Jack's and Dan's energy and zest are perfectly captured by the trio of illustrators who collaborated to create the characters for the entire series. With their anthropomorphized vehicles, lots of dust clouds and junkyard parts, and a font that incorporates truck parts into individual letters, they are sure to please. The combination of high-energy artwork and exuberant characters are sure to make the Trucktown series a necessary purchase for every garage library. (Picture book. 3-7)</p>

Reviewing Agencies: - Find Other Reviewed Titles
ALA Booklist (Thu Nov 01 00:00:00 CDT 2007)
School Library Journal
Wilson's Children's Catalog
Horn Book (Fri Aug 01 00:00:00 CDT 2008)
Starred Review for Publishers Weekly
Kirkus Reviews
Word Count: 393
Reading Level: 1.6
Interest Level: P-2
Accelerated Reader: reading level: 1.6 / points: 0.5 / quiz: 120870 / grade: Lower Grades
Lexile: AD430L

Welcome to Jon Scieszka's Trucktown, a brand-new preschool/kindergarten series that will come in more shapes, sizes, and formats than you can shake a bumper at. It's a world where all the characters are trucks, all the stories are action driven, and boys and girls can imagine themselves in all their crazy, loud, funny, creative, excited, full-throttle glory! It's a world where we work at play, and we play at work...and no one's afraid to get dirty or be LOUD! And it all kicks off with Smash! Crash! Best friends Jack and Dan are spending their day doing what they do best - smashing and crashing! All the while a strange shadow is following them around every corner...Who is this new addition to Trucktown? What does she want? Rhythmic, rollicking text will get kids' motors running and horns honking with each refrain! This is a book that begs to be read again and again!


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