Kirkus Reviews
Even a cranky chicken can have a good time with a friend.Chicken is cranky. She has cranky feet, a cranky beak, and a cranky unibrow, a dour, horizontal red line half-concealing her cranky eyes. What is she to do when a cheerful, zippy worm insists on being her BFF? Speedy the worm is anything but cranky-even their eyebrows are cheerful. (Speedy, who volunteers to be Chicken's "wing man" or "wing woman," doesn't seem picky about gender.) The worm is adamant that the two should learn how to handle friendship together. Over the course of five chapters, the pair become best buds. Speedy never insists that Chicken change, or even that the crankiness means something bad. In fact, the worm even takes crankiness lessons so the two can share some crank together. When expressive hugger Speedy dons their cranky pants and mimics Chicken's flat, irritable unibrow, it's clear the two are made for each other; Speedy makes Chicken feel "that thing when you're not cranky," supplying "Happy?" to Chicken with enthusiasm. Delightful, simply illustrated panels are packed with expressive motion and silliness. Speech (set in a faux handwritten type) sometimes overflows speech bubbles in a way that feels more accidental than stylized, and on one occasion low color contrasts make some difficult to trace to the speaker. (This book was reviewed digitally.)Will make even the crankiest reader feel that thing that's not cranky. (Happy!) (Graphic early reader. 5-8)
School Library Journal
(Mon Nov 01 00:00:00 CDT 2021)
K-Gr 2 The aptly named Cranky Chicken is grouchy about everything. When she meets Speedy, a spunky worm, the two spark up an unlikely friendship and eventually become BFFs (best feathered friends). Chicken and Speedy learn what it means to be friends and have adventures, and between each chapter section are pun-laden comic panels. The vocabulary is accessible for early readers, although emerging readers may struggle with the hand lettering. The warm pastel coloring and large, full-color, full-page comics, drawn appealingly to look as though they were rendered by a child, are sure to appeal to the intended age range. Themes of friendship and overcoming fears, with a dose of humor, will be relatable. VERDICT This early reader graphic novel about two unlikely friends will likely be a hit with fans of friendship stories; it's also a good introduction to graphic novel reading.Ellen Conlin, Naperville P. L., IL