What Animals Really Like
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- $9.99
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- $9.99
Publisher Description
When the National Animal Choir performs the latest song by renowned composer and conductor Mr. Herbert Timberteeth, nothing goes exactly as planned. Mr. Timberteeth has some preconceived notions of what animals like to do that are reflected in his song. But it turns out that lions prefer flower arranging to prowling and shrimp would rather ski than swim! With all the dissension and mayhem, will the show still go on? This hilarious picture book delivers a subtle message about stereotyping that kids, who are so often pigeonholed, will appreciate.
Awards and Praise for What Animals Really Like
2012 Winner of the Irma S. Black & James H. Black Award for Excellence in Children's Literature
"Robinson's story will keep children giggling at the beaver’s frustrated reactions and the animals’ unpredictable preferences. Encore!"
--Publishers Weekly
"Guffaws and surprising twists will have youngsters clamoring for a repeat performance. Brava!"
--Kirkus Reviews
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
After a title page announces "A New Song Composed & Conducted by Mr. Herbert Timberteeth," an opening gatefold reveals a huge cast of animals on a proscenium stage, organized in prim little groups as if for a recital. And the song that follows, directed by Timberteeth (a beaver), would fit right in at an elementary school performance, as the animals sing about stereotypical "likes" ("We are lions, and we like to prowl./ We are wolves, and we like to howl"). But the proceedings (and the rhyme scheme) turn anarchic when the animals reveal their actual interests: after the pigeons sing that they like to "coo," the cows reveal that they like to... dig. Owing both to the flummoxed metanarrative of Mo Willems's Pigeon books and to the gleeful non sequiturs of Mac Barnett and Adam Rex's Guess Again! Robinson's (The 3-2-3 Detective Agency) story will keep children giggling at the beaver's frustrated reactions and the animals' unpredictable preferences such as shrimp that ski ("e just got our photos back. Here we are in Switzerland") and monkeys that enjoy all-you-can-eat buffets. Encore! Ages 4 8.