One chicken nugget

Tadgh Bentley

Book - 2023

"Everybody knows monsters love chicken nuggets, but Frank loved them more than most. This is a problem if you happen to sell chicken nuggets, and Celeste sells the finest nuggets around. But Frank scares her other customers away, so she's forced to cook up an eating contest of monstrous proportions to get rid of him. If Frank wins, Celeste will make him free chicken nuggets for life. But if he loses, he must leave and never return. It starts with Frank eating a single chicken nugget. Then two. Then double that, then double it again . . . Just how quickly does this doubling add up? And how many chicken nuggets can Frank really eat?"--

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Subjects
Genres
Picture books
Illustrated works
Published
New York : Balzer + Bray, an imprint of HarpersCollinsPublisher 2023.
Language
English
Main Author
Tadgh Bentley (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
1 volume (unpaged) : color illustrations ; 26 cm
ISBN
9780062689825
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

A favorite fried food, a hungry monster, and an expansive math concept take center stage in Bentley's fresh take on an Indian folktale. Celeste, a young food truck proprietor portrayed with brown skin, purple pigtail puffs, and enormous red glasses, cooks up a plan to get rid of her most insatiable--and most ill-behaved--customer, a purple monster named Frank. Frank is delighted when Celeste debuts the 30-Day Double Nugget Challenge, stipulating that participants eat one nugget the first day, two the second day, and then continue subsequently doubling the amount. Readers will marvel at Frank's capacity for devouring an ever-growing quantity--with barbecue dipping sauce--in Bentley's candy-hued digital images, which make the comic most of both Celeste's tiny-kitchen-cooked nuggets and the concept of exponential growth. An author's note concludes. Ages 4--8. (Mar.)

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Review by School Library Journal Review

K-Gr 2--Inspired by the Indian folktale "One Grain of Rice" or "The Legend of Sissa ibn Dahir," this version focuses on Frank, a monster with an insatiable craving for chicken nuggets, and Celeste, the Black owner of a chicken nugget stand. Every day, Frank comes to Celeste's stand, demanding large quantities of chicken nuggets and scaring away her customers. Celeste quickly grows tired of Frank's lack of manners and decides to concoct a plan to get rid of him for good. She organizes a chicken nugget-eating contest, with the number of chicken nuggets doubling each day for one month. If Frank wins, she promises to cook him free chicken nuggets for the rest of his life. If he loses, he must leave and never come back. Frank is sure he is up to the challenge, but as the number of chicken nuggets begins to grow to outrageous numbers, he starts to struggle. Finally, after over three hundred million nuggets, Frank throws in the towel. He has eaten enough nuggets to last a lifetime. This story provides a funny, lighthearted explanation of exponential growth that is easy to understand for even the most reluctant mathematicians. Bentley's exuberant and colorful illustrations bring the story to life. End notes provide a concise explanation of exponential growth as well as the history of the original folktale. VERDICT For folktale collections or a funny math unit, this is an ideal story for making a greedy point go down smoothly.--Jillian Girardeau

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

A monster's passion for chicken nuggets is tested in this retelling of "The Legend of Sissa ibn Dahir," an Indian folktale centered on the concept of exponential growth. Frank, a furry, purple monster, loves chicken nuggets, and he's found the greatest nuggets in the world in Celeste's food truck. But Celeste, a Black-presenting human, finds that Frank is bad for business, from his atrocious table manners to the way he scares away her paying customers. After trying a series of failed solutions--illustrated in comedic vignettes--Celeste launches a monthlong, double-or-nothing contest: Each day, the amount of nuggets participants must consume doubles, and the prize is free nuggets for life. Day 1 is easy (a single nugget!), but as the contest gets exponentially harder, more competitors drop out, leaving Frank as the last eater standing. Lively, animated illustrations depict daily crowds that watch to see if Frank can continue to eat millions of nuggets. By the final days, Celeste's food truck is pushed to its limits, and even Frank has started struggling--especially when faced with the final day's double-page-spread mountain of nuggets. Frank's near-triumph and concession--what good are nuggets for life if one is thoroughly sick of them?--involve dynamic crowds and a delightfully monstrous belch. A final joke will tickle readers, and excellent endnotes contextualize exponential numbers. (This book was reviewed digitally.) Delicious to the last morsel. (Picture book. 4-9) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.