The Little Red Hen: An Old Fable
The Little Red Hen: An Old Fable
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August House
Annotation: The little Red Hen's frisky housemates--Dog, Cat, and Mouse--would rather play than settle down to daily chores such as planting, cutting, and grinding wheat. But when the wheat is used to make a delicious cake, the little creatures are more than happy to help eat it! The little Red Hen helps others learn how to help her even if it is more effort than doing the work herself.
Genre: [Fairy tales]
 
Reviews: 2
Catalog Number: #6561071
Format: Paperback
Publisher: August House
Copyright Date: 2015
Edition Date: 2006 Release Date: 10/07/15
Illustrator: Gaber, Susan,
Pages: 1 volume (unpaged)
ISBN: 1-939160-97-9
ISBN 13: 978-1-939160-97-3
Dewey: 398.2
LCCN: 2006040727
Dimensions: 28 cm.
Language: English
Reviews:
Kirkus Reviews

Most rhyming retellings of traditional stories miss the mark and lose the original charm, but not in this case. Forest and Gaber's third collaboration bakes up a culinary concoction of cake (in place of bread) that is fresh, folksy and fun. Coincidentally, this is the second version published in 2006, the other one by Jerry Pinkney. As with all renditions, the animals vary. Gaber gives personality to the dog, a Corgi carrying a blue blanket, a black-and-white cat that plays with a string of yarn and a mouse who's always reading a book about mice in different languages. Her folk-art images cleverly use ovoid shapes as a motif throughout (portrait insets of the animals, for instance) and imaginatively depict how the hen carries out each step, e.g., she uses her beak to cut the wheat and to hold a wooden spoon to stir the batter. Forest's rhymes are a little more casual than Pinkney's. Refined or rustic? Libraries will want both. Who will help read and enjoy this story? Everyone. (Picture book/folktale. 4-7)

School Library Journal

PreS-Gr 2 In this rhyming version of the workhorse story, a black-and-white kitten, corgi pup, and shiny-eyed mouse are the reluctant friends of Little Red Hen, who seems to wink conspiratorially at readers, as if to say, Here we go again! While cat is distracted by a yarn ball, dog wrestles with a blue blanket, and mouse surveys a sort of scrapbook of mice of many lands (complete with tags in German, Korean, Hebrew, and French, among other languages), Hen goes about her business, planting, cutting, grinding, and baking all by herself. But here, unlike most accounts, theres a twist: the lazy animals learn their lesson and are given a chance to redeem themselves: For after all is said and done, working together makes working fun. The rhyme schemes a bit bumpy at times and will require skilled reading aloud, but Gabers bold acrylic artwork and varied use of spacefrom full-bleed paintings to small, egg-shaped cameo vignettesand the infectious, familiar refrain of Not I, and, in this telling, My, my make this an appealing storytime and readers-theater selection. Kathy Krasniewicz, Perrot Library, Old Greenwich, CT

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Kirkus Reviews
School Library Journal
Word Count: 408
Reading Level: 2.2
Interest Level: P-2
Accelerated Reader: reading level: 2.2 / points: 0.5 / quiz: 106800 / grade: Lower Grades
Lexile: AD480L

Working together makes working fun. A little Red Hen lived in a house, with a frisky dog, a cat, and a mouse. So begins this fresh look at a beloved old fable. The little Red Hen's frisky housemates--Dog, Cat, and Mouse--would rather play than settle down to daily chores such as planting, cutting, and grinding wheat. But when the wheat is used to make a delicious cake, the little creatures are more than happy to help eat it! The Little Red Hen tells them that they can only eat the cake if they promise to help her work. Heather Forest's rhythmic retelling captures the chaos of daily living and celebrates the spirit of teamwork inherent in the tale. Susan Gaber's whimsical illustrations transport the reader to a cozy cottage where the little Red Hen helps others learn how to help her even if it is more effort than doing the work herself. This animal story about teamwork will teach readers the importance of fairness, sharing and helping each other. August House Publishers offer free lesson plans for The Little Red Hen !


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