Dirty Gert
-
- €7.49
-
- €7.49
Publisher Description
Gert loves dirt. She rolls in it, digs in it, even tastes it.
But one day, while she's making mud pies, all that dirt changes her. Gert sprouts leaves, grows roots, and begins to photosynthesize in the sunlight! Gert is delighted, but the neighborhood can’t believe it. . . and soon the notoriety becomes too much for the grungy, green girl.
Luckily, Mom and Dad know just what to do!
Told in rhythm and rhyme and full of fun, tongue-twisting vocabulary, Dirty Gert is a celebration of individuality and unconditional love. . . and, of course, of the fun of playing in the dirt. Tedd Arnold’s cartoonish illustrations—complete with a cast of whispering worm commentators—express the joy of making mudpies, playing with worms, and most importantly, spending time with your loving family.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In a comically offbeat story about acceptance from Arnold (the Fly Guy books), a small girl hungers for one thing alone: "Little Gert loved eating dirt./ The worms all idolized her.... Way back when Gert was just a squirt,/ The earth would tantalize her." As is the case with too much of anything, there are consequences to Gert's soil-based diet. After getting soaked in a rainstorm, Gert takes root in her yard and sprouts leaves from her already unruly hair, creating a neighborhood ruckus and media frenzy. Arnold's bug-eyed characters and squiggly textures are just right for a story about a girl who could give Charles Schulz's Pig-Pen a run for his money. Readers will enjoy searching the pages for funny asides from a Greek chorus of earthworms ("She is amazing," say two in unison, sensing a kindred spirit). Perhaps the best parts of the story are Arnold's verse which delivers quite the vocabulary lesson as he rhymes "soil internalizer" with "appetizer," "immortalize her," and other unexpected phrases and the reaction of Gert's parents, who gently nurture their daughter the way one would a plant. Literally. Ages 4 8.