A skill-building sequel to Interrupting Cow depicts the hilarious hijinks that ensue when the Interrupting Cow meets the Chicken who crossed the road. By the Caldecott Medal-winning author of How Do Dinosaurs Say Good Night? Simultaneous and eBook. Illustrations. - (Baker & Taylor)
Interrupting Cow feels lonely because her barnyard friends are tired of her jokes, but when she meets an old rooster across the long, gray road, things change. - (Baker & Taylor)
From critically acclaimed and prolific author Jane Yolen comes a hilarious Level 2 Ready-to-Read. Get ready for the Interrupting Cow to meet the Chicken Crossing the Road!
Why did the chicken cross the road? Was it to get to the other side...or was there more to the story? Read this hilarious book and see what happens when the Interrupting Cow meets the famous Chicken Crossing the Road! - (Simon and Schuster)
Jane Yolen is an award-winning author who has written more than 380 books for children, including the bestseller How Do Dinosaurs Say Good Night? and the 1988 Caldecott Medal winner Owl Moon. She is known for her beautiful poetry, picture books, fairy tales, novels, and nonfiction, and has even been called “the Hans Christian Andersen of America” (Newsweek). She lives in Hatfield, Massachusetts. Visit her at JaneYolen.com.
Joëlle Dreidemy can’t remember the first time she started drawing…maybe the first time she picked up a pencil! She spent her childhood among books from Roald Dahl, Quentin Blake, Tony Ross, Ralph Steadman, and others who influenced her style. Joelle studied art at the famous Emile Cohl School in Lyon, France, where she met fantastic and motivating teachers like Yves Got and Jean Claverie. She now lives in Paris illustrating projects for French, English, American, and Korean publishers. When not drawing, Joelle practices karate, plays piano, and goes to museums and the movies. - (Simon and Schuster)
Jane Yolen is an award-winning author who has written more than 380 books for children, including the bestseller How Do Dinosaurs Say Good Night? and the 1988 Caldecott Medal winner Owl Moon. She is known for her beautiful poetry, picture books, fairy tales, novels, and nonfiction, and has even been called 'the Hans Christian Andersen of America' (Newsweek). She lives in Hatfield, Massachusetts. Visit her at JaneYolen.com.
Joelle Dreidemy can't remember the first time she started drawing'maybe since the first time she picked up a pencil! She spent her childhood among books from Roald Dahl, Quentin Blake, Tony Ross, Ralph Steadman, and others who influenced her style. Joelle studied art at the famous Emile Cohl School in Lyon, France, where she met fantastic and motivating teachers like Yves Got and Jean Claverie. She now lives in Paris illustrating projects for French, English, American, and Korean publishers. When not drawing, Joelle practices karate, plays piano, and goes to museums and the movies. - (Simon and Schuster)
Kirkus Reviews
A cow searches for a new audience and finds a friend. In this sequel to Interrupting Cow (2020), the eponymous bovine's chickens have come home to roost, so to speak, as none of the other cows want to hear her tired, interruption-filled joke anymore. The cows almost immediately race away, "kicking up dirt and irritation." Their departure warns the other barnyard animals, who quickly follow before Interrupting Cow gets too close. Even Owl, who is usually kind, skirts around the cow's punchline. Lonely and a little sad, Interrupting Cow walks and walks until she comes to an "endless gray road." On the other side of the road, Rooster keeps trying to cross, but cars, trucks, and tractors scare him off. Interrupting Cow brazenly crosses to Rooster's side and butts into his situation. As she helps him cross, the two bond over their sense of humor, falling down into helpless giggles. Yolen tackles yet another classic inane joke and infuses its subject with heart and humor. With a total vocabulary of around 250 words and their variants, this sequel is slightly more advanced than its predecessor. But, with at most 19 lines per double-page spread, the text remains accessible to emerging readers. Dreidemy's full-color cartoon illustrations add context clues. (This book was reviewed digitally with 9-by-12-inch double-page spreads viewed at 76% actual size.) Sure to "beak" readers' interest. (Early reader. 5-7) Copyright Kirkus 2020 Kirkus/BPI Communications. All rights reserved.