Snail & Worm

Tina Kügler

Book - 2016

Snail and Worm are best friends who support each other during a silly game of tag, through Snail's adventure up a flower stalk, and when Worm's pet goes missing.

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jE/Kugler
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Location Call Number   Status
Children's Room jE/Kugler Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Picture books
Published
Boston ; New York : Houghton Mifflin Harcourt [2016]
Language
English
Main Author
Tina Kügler (author, -)
Item Description
"Three stories about two friends"--Cover.
Physical Description
1 volume (unpaged) : color illustrations ; 23 cm
ISBN
9780544494121
  • Meet my friend
  • Snail's adventure
  • Meet my pet.
Review by Booklist Review

When Snail meets Worm, Snail has been blithely playing with his friends Bob and Anne, a rock and stick, respectively. Happily, Worm isn't bothered by Snail's inanimate buddies and joins right in. Next, Snail wants to climb a very tall flower. Like a good buddy, Worm cheers him on all the way to the top. Readers will be tickled when they see where Snail ends up, particularly when he looks back at his shell and exclaims, I can see my house! In the closing vignette, Worm describes his big, furry, brown pet, but Snail thinks it sounds like a scary spider. Kügler's cartoonish creatures, rendered simply in thin lines and soft colors, each have comically googly eyes and cheery expressions, which add plenty of fun visual punchlines and context clues to the short, direct sentences making up the easy-to-read text. Thanks to Kügler's large-format illustrations, early readers should handily pick up on the gently humorous miscommunications between Snail and Worm. The heartening message about accepting a friend's quirks is a cozy bonus.--Hunter, Sarah Copyright 2016 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Two new friends-neither, let's say, in danger of winning a MacArthur Genius Grant anytime soon-star in three cheerfully screwy stories from Kügler (In Mary's Garden). In the first, Worm meets Snail while the gastropod is playing tag with a rock. "I win! I am fast. You are slow," Snail taunts the immobile rock, its eyestalks almost seeming to cheer in delight. Snail scales a tall flower in the equally funny second story, reveling in the amazing views while ignoring that its weight has caused the flower to bend down to the ground. "Wow! They look like ants down there!" Snail raves, staring at actual ants. "Wow! I can see my house!" Snail adds, looking at the shell affixed to its body. The friends show off their pets in the third story-a dog Snail thinks is a spider and a spider believed to be a dog. Snail and Worm's direct, simplified dialogue is perfect for beginning readers, and their unabashed dopiness-equally evident in their conversations and in Kügler's mixed-media cartoons-delivers a steady stream of laughs. Ages 6-9. Agent: Teresa Kietlinski, Prospect Agency. (May) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by School Library Journal Review

PreS-Gr 1-A friend is good to have, but a best friend is even better. Snail and Worm are best buds in the tradition of Arnold Lobel's Frog and Toad or Mo Willems's Elephant and Piggie. The pair have three silly adventures that are sure to please any young reader. Worm goes along with Snail's antics as they play tag with a rock named Bob and Ann the stick. When Snail is determined to climb a flower, Worm is there to cheer him on every step of the way. In the final story, Worm has lost his pet and describes what it looks like to his friend. Snail is positive that Worm's lost pet is a spider. The ending is humorous to all readers. This is a good choice for children not yet ready for early chapter books. The text is not too difficult, nor is it overwhelming. The speech for each character is written in different colors to make it easier to distinguish who is talking. Some of the humor may need to be explained to younger children, but it also makes this book enjoyable. The acrylic illustrations are simple, straightforward, and uncluttered. The characters have great expressions and are animated. VERDICT This appealing easy reader is a must-have for most collections.-Barbara Spiri, Southborough Library, MA © Copyright 2016. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Horn Book Review

In three brief stories, Kgler introduces new readers to two unlikely pals. "Meet My Friend" begins with eager-beaver Snail trying to organize a game of tag: "Hello! Want to play?Can you catch me? No! No! No!" Its no surprise the gastropod has the upper hand: Snail is talking to a rock (and not even a sentient one at that). When Worm approaches, curious about the game, a new friendship is formed. They bond over small victories (Snail climbs a flower while Worm acts as cheerleader in "Snails Adventure") and common interests ("Meet My Pet" reveals that they both have unusual pets). Like lots of easy-reader duos -- Frog and Toad, Elephant and Piggie, Bink and Gollie, to name a few -- theres an odd-couple dynamic at work: Worm is down-to-earth (which seems fitting), while Snail is more of a dreamer. Unlike the similarly levelheaded Toad, Gerald, and Gollie, however, Worm doesnt suffer from know-it-all-itis. The invertebrate remains sincere, loyal, and guileless throughout, even when Snail is being very silly. Kglers simple text, all in color-coded dialogue, includes some good jokes that rely gleefully on the mixed-media illustrations to hit their punch lines: Snail, from atop the flower, eyes on shell, says, "Wow! I can see my house!" Though the pictures almost all take place on the same patch of ground, their variety of format -- panels, spots, full pages, spreads, thought bubbles -- keeps things lively while helping direct the eyes of readers looking for a laugh. elissa gershowitz (c) Copyright 2016. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Three stories told in mostly one-syllable sight words for beginning readers introduce yet another odd-couple pair of animal friends. Each chapter uses just 40 to 50 words of conversation between two invertebrate friends who share the roles of dimwitted innocent and slightly bemused foil. First, Snail talks to a rock named Bob, prompting Worm to introduce a stick named Ann. In the second tale, Worm cheers Snail's triumphal conquest of a flower that bends almost to the ground under its weight. In the third story, Worm's attempts at description are tripped up by Snail's overactive imagination. Snail imagines a terrifying spider as Worm describes a lost dog without ever using the word "dog." Unfortunately the quirky, animation-inspired illustrations do not match either Worm's description or Snail's imaginings, leaving readers clueless and just as confused as Snail when Worm's pet appears. The final twist, that Snail's pet is a "dog" named Rex that is clearly a spider, will puzzle rather than amuse young readers. The underlying problem with all these tales is that the humor is exceedingly understated and dependent on a sophisticated sense of irony; children struggling to decode the text will get little help from the illustrations. Friendship and the difficulty of clear communication are the basis for the conflict between classic duos like Frog and Toad, George and Martha, and Elephant and Piggie. None of these need to fear being replaced by Snail and Worm. (Early reader. 6-9) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.